Ed Muir, 84, travelled from his home in Naples, Florida to Fargo, North Dakota to see his brother, Kenneth Corcoran, 82, after Corcoran's family tracked him down using the internet.
'I recognised him as soon as he came off [the plane],' Corcoran told WDAY-TV. 'Well, 80 years. I looked and said, there he is.'
Happy families: Edward Muir, 84, left, and Kenny Corcoran, 82, right, have been reunited 80 years after Corcoran was sent to an orphanage following the death of their mother |
The three siblings who were sent to the orphanage changed their names and were raised in different states, with Corcoran growing up in North Dakota.
'I worried about them,' Muir told the Naples News. 'I often thought about the rest of my family how they ever turned out, but I had no idea.'
But as it happens, the brothers did not turn out too dissimilar. They both served in the military, raised their children in the same way and share the identical favourite song - Wabash Cannonball.
Muir joined the Air Force in 1946 and later married and raised four children in Chicago. He worked as an electrician until 1987, and moved to Naples, Florida in 1997.
Corcoran also joined the Navy as a young man, worked as a railroad lineman, married and raised six children. Their three other siblings - two brothers and a sister - have all since died.
Split up: Muir points out himself in a picture of the boys when they were young. He and another brother stayed with his father while Corcoran (to the right) and two other siblings were sent away |
Corcoran's daughter, Pam Gregerson, spent nine years trying to track down her father's sibling's names, birth dates and hometowns.
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