Entertainment
Couple Celebrates 60 Years Since Unforgettable Wedding Day
On September 25, 2025, Ian and Ann Galbraith will commemorate an extraordinary milestone: their 60th wedding anniversary. Their union, which began in a rush on a fateful day in 1965, was filled with unexpected twists and charming details, marking the start of a lifelong journey together.
The couple exchanged vows at St John’s Presbyterian Church in Hastings, a location that has since become a cherished part of their history. The ceremony took an unexpected turn when their officiating minister, who had been hospitalized, informed them just days before that he would be unable to conduct the service. Instead, he arranged for a replacement, who was delayed due to a crucial hockey match. As Ann recalls, “His game went longer than expected.”
After the wedding breakfast, the newlyweds participated in a unique celebration, being piped into the Hastings and Districts Scottish Society’s monthly dinner meeting. Ian shared that they will recreate this moment during their anniversary gathering in Rangiora with traditional music and ceremonial bearers. “We were piped 60 years ago, and this Saturday night… we will once again be piped into the room accompanied by a sword bearer, a haggis bearer, a whisky bearer, and a dirk bearer,” he stated, expressing gratitude to the McAlpines North Canterbury Pipe Band for their assistance.
Ian and Ann’s love story began in 1964 when they met on a blind date set up by an apprentice at Ian’s workplace, a radio service business. The plan was to fill in as dates for nurses attending the annual nurses’ ball at Hastings Memorial Hospital. “They were short a few men, so we stepped up,” Ian explained. However, the evening started slowly as no one initially greeted them. Eventually, Ian approached Ann and her friend, and that moment sparked the connection that would last six decades.
Ann, an operating room nurse at the hospital, soon discovered Ian’s passion for the Scottish Society in Hawke’s Bay, where they participated in social events every weekend. “I also saw my first man in a dress—a kilt Ian had specially made years earlier when he had visited Dunedin,” Ann remarked, noting the significant cost of forty pounds at that time.
Together, they raised two children who now reside in Christchurch. Following Ian’s retirement in 2006 as a director of a whiteware manufacturing company in Masterton, the couple relocated to Rangiora to be closer to family. Ian credits Ann’s unwavering support as essential to pursuing his interests in Scottish societies, model train engineering, and photography. Ann maintains her enthusiasm for Scottish dancing and looks forward to resuming it in the near future.
As they reflect on their remarkable journey, the Galbraiths exemplify how love and community can flourish over time, transforming unexpected challenges into cherished memories.
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