Meet James and Sherburne Martin
He was a gentleman and had a lot of qualities that her dad had.
It began at West Town Mall—a chance meeting that grew into decades spent side by side. He spotted in her the qualities he’d hoped to find in a wife—kindness, strength, the intangible echo of what he admired in his own family. She noticed his gentleness, his steady ways, and found in him a reflection of the man she had always looked up to—her father. Their early connection wasn’t marked by fireworks, but by quiet understanding, compatibility, and the grounding pull of finding someone whose values mirror your own.
In each other, they recognized kindness and generosity. She calls him patient, handsome, always ready to lend a hand with the breakfast or the household chores—never letting daily routines settle into monotony. He sees her warmth most clearly in the way she moves through the world, and in the way she loves not just him, but those around her. Building their life meant layering in small comforts: yard sales on weekends, afternoons at the bowling alley, the pleasure of easy company. The laughter comes often—sometimes with, sometimes at each other, but always woven through with fondness.
Their marriage weathered storms that could have pulled them apart. The most difficult season came when they opened their home to a nephew for more than five years, stretching the boundaries of their family while raising five children of their own. The new family dynamic introduced unanticipated complexities, making the household ebb and flow with change. Protecting each other, physically and spiritually, became a daily practice—not just from outside pressures, but from the quiet temptations to forget what grounded them.
What pulled them through was a shared faith, a compass they returned to even when it would have been easier to drift. She says it forced her to spend more time in the Word and to extend grace—first to herself, then to her family. For him, faith became the North Star, the foundation for every hard-won lesson in patience and understanding. Together, they learned that being strong sometimes means being soft—with themselves, with each other, and with their children as the family expanded and changed.
Years and seasons pass, but their advice to those starting out remains simple: patience matters. Find the things your partner loves, ways to show love that are tailored and true. Sustain yourselves with laughter, not in spite of imperfections, but because of them. And, above it all, they echo a simple truth: marriage takes three. It’s you, your spouse, and the steady presence of something greater—a faith that knits all the everyday moments into a lifetime of shared meaning. Theirs is a love lived not loud, but deep—a testament to the quiet rituals of care, the big-hearted resilience of family, and the grace found in forging a life together.
Words from those who love James and Sherburne
He was a gentleman and had a lot of qualities that her dad had.
The Word is your North Star. It has to be a focus every day.
Marriage takes 3. You, your spouse and God.
He was a gentleman and had a lot of qualities that her dad had.
The Word is your North Star. It has to be a focus every day.
Marriage takes 3. You, your spouse and God.
The Marriage Hall of Fame celebrates couples who’ve been married 45+ years—and the everyday acts of love that got them there. We share their stories to honor commitment and inspire hope. Want to celebrate someone's induction in the Hall of Fame with a gift? Check out our Gift Store.