Surprise Homecoming: Class ring finds its way back to owner after 6 decades

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Deloris Whitlock (right) stands with Terry and George Blackert of Prophetstown on Wednesday evening outside the old Sterling theater. Whitlock found a class ring 60 years ago and finally found the owner, George, in October this year. (Chris Padgett/cpadgett@svnmail.com)
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ROCK FALLS – A class ring lost more than 60 years ago has found its way back to its owner’s finger.

Deloris Whitlock of Rock Falls was dating Donald Whitlock, the man she was destined to marry, when she found the ring outside the movie theater in Sterling in 1949.

She returned it to George Blackert of Prophetstown last month, more than 6 decades after it went missing.

“My wife, Terry, and I were going together at the time, and I had given it to her,” Blackert said. “She was wearing it on a chain around her neck, and the chain must have broken. Deloris must have found it the same night.”

She was in the right place at the right time.

“We had just gotten out of the car in front of the theater,” Deloris Whitlock said. “I looked down at the curb and saw a ring lying there.”

She showed the man’s class ring to her beau, tucked it into her pocket, and went inside to watch the movie. A few days later, she put an ad in the lost-and-found section of the Daily Gazette, but no one called to claim the ring.

She put it into her jewelry box, where it spent the next 60 years.

“I would come across it every now and then and wonder,” she said. “But the years go by so fast.

“One day after Donald died, I was looking through my jewelry box and saw the class ring. I thought, ‘Now I have time, and I’m going to look for the owner.’ I thought Donald would have liked that.

“I think I would have given up looking for the owner a long time ago, but Donald always wanted to get the ring back to him.”

The initials GB were engraved inside the band. That and the letter P and date – 1949 – on the decorative front were the clues she needed to begin her quest.

“Donald had said the ‘P’ probably stood for Prophetstown. I took it to my daughter, Theresa Collins in Sterling – she was her dad’s secretary in his business, D&W Heating and Air Conditioning – and she said we needed to go to Prophetstown to ask around,” Deloris said.

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