Long-lost brothers separated in 1945 are to be reunited after 77 years apart

Authored by yahoo.com and submitted by Sariel007
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A pair of long-lost brothers who were separated as children in 1945 are to be reunited for the first time after 77 YEARS apart.

Ted Nobbs, 83, and his brother Geoff, 79, have spent more than seven decades 10,000 miles apart after their family was divided up at the end of the Second World War.

Ted, along with siblings Barry and John, were all separated from their youngest brother Geoff after their mum tragically died of cancer, aged just 30, in 1945.

Their father wasn’t able to cope with caring for Geoff, who was one at the time, so decided to offer him up for adoption to give him a chance of a better life.

Geoff moved to Australia in 1951, aged seven, with his adoptive family and has lived there ever since - going on to have eight kids and grandchildren of his own.

Ted, Barry and John had all tried several times over the years to find their little brother without any success.

But their luck changed in 2014, four years after eldest brother John passed away, when Geoff tracked down Barry and sent him a letter.

They all began talking over Skype and on the phone, finally getting to know each other after many years.

Now Ted, from Rugby, Warks., will meet Geoff for the first time since they were young boys in a heartwarming reunion this Sunday (4/9).

The retired factory worker said: “When Geoff first contacted us it was obviously quite emotional after all these years.

“It absolutely crunched me when he found us, I just didn’t think it would happen. There were a few tears shed.

"A letter from Geoff just landed on Barry's doorstep out of the blue. We were all reunited on a phone call and it was just wonderful catching up.

Brokenandbeaten on September 6th, 2022 at 18:15 UTC »

My mother had a similar story, but even darker than this one. My grandmother had her third daughter at Christmas time in 53’-54’. However her husband divorced her midway thru the pregnancy in rural Arkansas so she was becoming a single mother of three. The hospital or social services, it’s never been made clear, gave her the option of putting the baby up for adoption or they would take all three babies away. My aunt was 3 and mother was just shy of 2. She didn’t have the resources to fight or the knowledge of how it worked. She was very young, likely 17-19 at this point. She later remarried and had 2 boys. However she never told anyone about this. So no one ever knew. Growing up we never understood why Christmas was a time of sorrow. It was alway very poor. Eventually, grandpa that I’ve never known died and his will was worded in such a way that his estate had to be split to his biological kids. So the lawyer had to track down the lost sister and that caused some family turmoil in the good way. She had a good life and got to meet everyone several times. They stay in touch to this day and ny mother wrote a book about it all. My mother passed a few years ago and got to hear her sister by phone the day she passed.

I’m still baffled at social service stealing babies, but there is always something terrible going on when you look at what was accepted back in the day.

Sidenote, Walmart HQ is built on top of the family ranch in Arkansas.

MontEcola on September 6th, 2022 at 15:08 UTC »

How sad.

My own grandmother had a similar story. She was younger, and was separated from the other siblings when her parents died. She met the others at age 52. It had been 44 years. some had passed away by then.

magobblie on September 6th, 2022 at 14:49 UTC »

That's so heartbreaking. Those poor kids lost their mother and then each other for way too long.