Love in the air: Senator Roraback takes a bride


 


 

The first Valentine's Day spent as a married couple can be a litmus test of the marriage. State Sen. Andrew Roraback, who married Kara Leigh Dowling on Dec. 22, 2007, plans to make their first a very romantic one.

"We're looking forward to spending our first Valentine's Day together and hopefully I'll get out of the Legislature in time to have a romantic dinner," the newlywed senator said. "It will be my first roses as a husband."

Roraback, who is 47, put his bachelor days behind him when he proposed to Dowling on a sunny Sunday afternoon in September.

"We were up on the coast of Maine, sitting on the water's edge with our dog between us, of course," Dowling, who has not yet changed her name, said. "He was very sweet. It was a beautiful day, a beautiful setting."

Roraback and Dowling met at the Yale Club of Hartford in 2006, where Roraback was giving a talk.

"We were introduced by common friends," he said. "Kara actually went to Harvard, but she was invited by Yale people to come hear me speak."

A year later, the two were planning an intimate Christmas wedding at Dowling's parents' home in West Hartford. The guest list was small, and included 26 family members.

"There was no bridal party; that would have been pretty much the whole wedding guest list," Dowling said.

The couple was married in West Hartford in an evening religious ceremony performed by the Rev. Ellen L. Tillotson of Trinity Episcopal Church in Torrington, Roraback's longtime church. Nephews of the bride and groom offered readings during the ceremony.

The bride wore a simple, cream colored sheath-style dress. Flowers, which had a Christmas-holiday feel, were provided by Lane & Lenge Florist in West Hartford.

"The holidays are so pretty unto themselves, so that was the whole theme of the decor," Dowling said. "We didn't want to compete with the seasonal decor. There were wreaths and greens draped all around."

The meal consisted of Ceasar salad - "That's Andrew's favorite," Dowling said - beef tenderloin and twice-baked potatoes.

"It was kid-friendly food," Dowling said with a laugh.

The couple honeymooned on the island of Antigua in the Caribbean.

"It was warm and beautiful and a good place to recharge our batteries," Roraback said.

With the honeymoon behind them, Roraback and Dowling have returned to Goshen, where they live with their dog, Squawk, and have returned to their regular routines. Roraback attends to state business at the Capitol while Dowling works as director of program development at Saint Francis Hospital in Hartford.

Roraback said married life is a welcome relief from the daily grind of work.

"It's a nice thing to go home at the end of the day and share a little bit of what went on," he said.

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