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In 1927, Lawrence Welk and His Novelty Band discovered
the power of the media when Welk persuaded a Yankton radio manager to
let them play on his station one morning. It went so well, that the band
got a long-term contract out of the deal.
Lawrence had no shortage of female admirers in Yankton, but the nursing
student he fell for wasnt one of them. Fern Renner was far more
interested in becoming a doctor than getting mixed up with a musician.
Lawrence became so desperate that he scheduled himself for a tonsillectomy,
hoping she would be his nurse. She wasnt, but she felt sorry enough
for him to visit him afterwards.
It was on this day in 1931 that Lawrence finally won Ferns hand.
They got married in Sioux City, Iowa, at 5:30 in the morning, because
Lawrence and his band had to get on the road to play a show in Wisconsin
that night.
Fern enjoyed being a wife and mother but maintained a lifelong interest
in medical science and research. She was an avid duplicate bridge player,
winning many championships and she relished her afternoons at the horse
races, placing her small bets with the knowledge and instincts of a "pro."
Though marriage brought her into the life of a celebrity, she always knew
that her family and her faith gave her life its true wealth.
Fern guided the education of her children and saw her grandchildren achieve
many college, career and graduate degrees. Their nurturing was her life's
joy, and it is no accident that her two daughters happily married physicians
and that three of her eleven grandchildren became physicians.
Fern Welk, died February 13, 2002, at St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica,
California. She was 98 years old.
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prior permission from North Dakota Public Radio.
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