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Manitoba

Couple married for 75 years first met in revolving door at The Bay in downtown Winnipeg

Some romances begin when two people lock eyes from across a crowded room, butRuth Schroeder met her partner of 75 years in a revolving door at The Bay in downtown Winnipeg.

Ruth Schroeder, 99, says she was saddened to learn of the iconic store's closure

Ruth Schroeder would get quizzical looks from her children when she told them she met their father in a revolving door. (Twitter/Amanda McVicar)

Some romances begin when two people lock eyes from across a crowded room, butRuth Schroeder met her partner of 75 years in a revolving door at The Bay in downtown Winnipeg.

In 1942, Schroeder and her sister were walking into The Bay to do some shopping as her future husband John was walking out, through a revolving a door.

"[My sister] waved him because she knew him from before," Schroeder said. "He came back in and we were introduced."

The two were wed in 1945and moved to the Charleswood area. The couple bouncedaround several times before settling down just over 60 kilometres south of Winnipegin the town of Morris,where they ran a greenhouse and still reside.

Many people, includingSchroeder, are thinking back to their memories of the iconicBay building in downtown Winnipeg, after the company announced this week it was closing for good.

Opening its doorsin 1926, The Bay was built to meet the demands of the time, encompassing 655,755 square feet over six storeys. But in November 2019, the building was appraised at $0, and the costs to bring it up to code were around$111 million.

The Hudson's Bay Co. had planned to close the building down in February 2021, but new COVID-19 restrictions in Manitoba have forced the building to close sooner.

Hudsons Bay Company Winnipeg store, Portage Avenue and Memorial Boulevard, circa 1939. It was the company's flagship until it was supplanted by one in Toronto. (Hudsons Bay Company Archives/Archives of Manitoba)

Schroeder hasn't shopped at the downtown location "for years and years," but the news of the building shutting down still saddened her, she said.

"It has been there for so many years, and it was sort of this historic building. But I can understand it," said Schroeder, who worked in various departments at the store when she first moved to Winnipeg.

Back when Schroeder had her fateful encounter, circa 1942, The Bay "was a nice big store."

"A week before Christmas, they would open the doors about a half-hour before the usual hour, and you could go inside and listen to their choir," she said, referring to the store's in-housechoir that would sing near the steps that led to aloft.

"We really enjoyed that."

Today, Schroeder, 99,lives in an apartmentin a seniors residence that is about two blocks from the personal care home whereher 102-year-old husband lives.

Schroeder and her husband John have been married 75 years. They live about two blocks from each other in the town of Morris. (Twitter/Amanda McVicar)

With files from Riley Laychuk