LEWISTON, Maine — Martel Elementary School secretary Rebecca Lussier didn’t think anything unusual was happening when she was called to an assembly Monday.

She was baffled when asked to sit in a balloon-decorated chair facing the audience.

Her puzzlement turned to surprise, then joy, when boyfriend Bill Hensley emerged with a ring, got down on one knee and said, “Will you marry me?”

She said yes as 300 students cheered.

“I was surprised, shocked, shaking like crazy, and happy,” Lussier said Wednesday. She gave her fiance a grade of A-plus for executing the formal proposal.

Hensley did his homework and had help from Principal Steve Whitfield, who it turns out is a big romantic.

But Hensley couldn’t call Whitfield outright. Lussier, the school secretary, answers the school’s phone.

So he asked a woman from Trask Jewelers in Farmington, where he bought the ring, to make the call for him.

The woman called the principal, then put Hensley on the phone. Hensley explained that he didn’t want to impose, but he’d like to propose at school.

“When they first met, she told him she had 300 children,” Whitfield said, adding that the school’s environment is like a family and Lussier is loved by the students and staff.

The couple had been talking about becoming engaged. She was expecting the proposal to be soon, so it wasn’t a question of whether she’d say yes, Whitfield said. A negative answer in front of students wouldn’t be a positive experience.

An assembly already was scheduled for the end of the day Monday to call attention to students’ positive school behavior. The proposal could be added, Whitfield reasoned. It would be a positive life lesson for students.

Hensley was advised to show up at school near the end of the day. He parked his car at CVS and was sneaked into the school by the kitchen staff who knew he was coming. Anxious, he came a full hour early.

“We had to hide him in the kitchen,” Whitfield said. Because the school secretary often delivers messages around the school, “security had to be good,” Whitfield said.

At first, only a few people knew what was going to happen. During the day, a few teachers were informed.

Before the proposal, Hensley was appropriately nervous, Whitfield said with a laugh. When Hensley proposed, “the fifth- and sixth-grade girls cried. There were tears from two-thirds of the staff,” Whitfield said.

Did Whitfield cry?

“Almost,” he said.

Strings teacher Dave Boardman’s lessons were canceled that afternoon. He agreed to fiddle a love song at the engagement assembly. Kitchen staff served punch. Young students thought they witnessed a wedding. “We had to explain: ‘It was the asking,’” Whitfield said.

One first-grade teacher used the event Tuesday as a writing prompt, assigning students to write congratulation notes to the couple. “We got some academics out of it,” Whitfield said.

No wedding date has been set.

Hensley, 31, works in electronics at Radio Shack in Farmington. He’s pleased that he was able to propose “to the woman I love” at her school. “It went better than planned.”

Lussier, 28, called her betrothed her best friend.

“I can count on him,” she said. “He makes me laugh. We have lots of fun.”

He said, “She’s everything I’m looking for and more.”

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30 Comments

  1. Sweet story.  

    On the funny side, now every girl that goes to that school has an expectation for their proposal that none of the poor boys at that school are going to be able to top.

  2. congrats to the couple, however its kind of a copycat story as something similar happened up at a limestone school a month or so ago.

    1. You mean she got 2 proposals? I hope she turned the other one down or I  see a story on bigamy down the road……

  3. It’s a sweet, romantic story…BUT, is it appropriate to force children to observe a wedding proposal? It’s a taxpayer funded facility, with all staff on the taxpayer’s dime supposedly instructing pupils…

    Keeping school staff’s private lives PRIVATE is old fashioned, I suppose.

    1. Grinch! How much of your tax dollars do you think went into this extra assembly? Why not protest footing the bill for someone else’s kids to take advanced placement college courses on your dime? Now that’s what irks me.

      1. Don’t get me wrong…I’m all for romance and love and marriage, etc…but:

        What if they want to get married at school during school hours? Spend their honeymoon in a classroom? Where does a school draw the line between educating kids and having staff’s private lives on display?

        1. The school probably draws the line when one or two people (cough cough) make a big stink over “nothing.”

        2. Sure.. they are going to spend their honeymoon in a classroom… certain of it.

          WTF is wrong with people.

    2. Oh, so politically correct you are.  Would you rather she be unmarried and pregnant as the school secretary?  Then you could complain about that.  Probably your tax dollar part of that few moments was a fraction of a cent.  Post your address and I will send you a penny to cover your costs and you won’t have anything to complain about until you find something else.

        1. I’ll chip in a penny too, then Thomas can profit off this venture.
          ***********************************************************
          I’ll put my two cents in and he can double his profit!

  4. What a lovely story! It shows you some princes don’t need to wear crowns. I hope this couple lives a happy-ever-after marriage. 

    1. Absolutely.  There seems to be an explosion of these public marriage proposals lately.  It’s bizarre.  What kind of man would put the woman he loves in such an awkward and embarrassing position?

  5. First it’s a waste of taxpayers money, second why would you do that in front of a crowd??.. a bit insecure that she would have said no in private… Don’t Marry him!!!! To controling…..

        1. Nah…. you think you come off as smart and enlightened, but your 5th grade grammar shows your true colors…

          1. hahaha!!! I am what I believe I am,  a humble servant.. I can only help educate those who don’t know it all.. I have in the past been told it was 3rd grade, I must have learned something..  Thanks for the upgrade… Do you allways move your students forward this fast.. For only a union teacher would go off subject and into the classroom when confronted with reality…

  6. To all of you negative nancy’s saying how he shouldn’t have done it publicly, I question your reading comprehension. Normally I’d agree, don’t put your girl on the spot in front of others. However, maybe you all failed to read this crucial part to the story:

    “The couple had been talking about becoming engaged. She was expecting
    the proposal to be soon, so it wasn’t a question of whether she’d say
    yes, Whitfield said.”

    It never ceases to amaze me at how people can take a feel good story and spin it around with negativity. Oh well.

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