Politics
Washington weddings begin for same-sex couples
|
11:50 AM on 03/09/2010 |
| Join Our Mailing List |
WATCH THIS VIDEO ON GAY MARRIAGE IN DC
JESSICA GRESKO,Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -- It's a day of wedding bells for some gay couples in Washington.
Tuesday is the first day same-sex couples can pick up marriage licenses and tie the knot in the city. Some couples planned quick ceremonies at a church or gay rights group's office while others said they'll wait and have more elaborate celebrations.
About 150 couples could pick up their marriage licenses beginning at 8:30 a.m. Tuesday. Those are the couples that applied on the first day the licenses were made available. Many of them stood in line for four or more hours last Wednesday.
The District of Columbia is the sixth place in the country permitting same-sex unions. Connecticut, Iowa, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Vermont also issue same-sex couples licenses. Once couples pick up their license, they have to have the person who performs their marriage sign it and then return it to the marriage bureau to be recorded.
Three morning weddings were planned at the office of the Human Rights Campaign, which does advocacy work on lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender issues. In the afternoon, a couple had a ceremony planned at All Souls Church -- the same place where DC Mayor Adrian Fenty in December signed the bill legalizing the unions.
Another couple, district residents Eva Townsend and Shana McDavis-Conway, said they were planning a wedding by their plot in a community garden, where they have grown carrots and potatoes.
Other couples said they already had ceremonies and would simply wed at the courthouse, which has space for about 15 people in a ceremony room. Most of those celebrations will take place during the weeks of March 22 and March 29, courthouse spokeswoman Leah Gurowitz.
Normally, the courthouse has four to six weddings a day, but over the next several weeks they are expecting 10 to 12 per day. Some courtrooms and judge's chambers may be used for the ceremonies, with the couple's OK. The court's official marriage booklet has been updated so that the ceremony will end by pronouncing the couple "legally married" as opposed to "husband and wife."
More than 300 people applied for marriage licenses from Wednesday to Friday, almost all same-sex couples, Gurowitz said.
Follow theGrio on Facebook & Twitter!
-
Women's shaved hair revolution taking shape
-
Rap Genius: The top 5 rap lyrics of the week -- Pusha T talks money
-
New MLK assassination footage revealed in Smithsonian Channel doc
-
Komen won't cut breast-screening grants to Planned Parenthood
-
NBA All-Star roster revealed: From Kobe to Chris Paul, LA teams dominate
-
The 10 most memorable presidential campaign themes (SLIDESHOW)
-
Angelo Dundee dead: Legendary trainer for Muhammad Ali, Sugar Ray Leonard dies at 90
-
Black stars shine at 2012 SAG Awards (SLIDESHOW)
-
'Key & Peele' set to kick off: What are the best Obama parodies?
-
Anthony Mackie in 'Man on a Ledge': Is he the next Denzel? (SLIDESHOW)
-
Black unemployment: What Washington can do now to address the high black jobless rate
-
The trouble with Trump's Romney endorsement: It's the birtherism, stupid
-
Eddie Long 'crowning': Why do black churches often put pastors on a pedestal?
-
Why Jan Brewer's disrespect will motivate black voters for Obama
-
Trump endorsement may hurt, not help Romney
Popular Topics
- Barack Obama: 1767 Stories
- Music: 746 Stories
- Hip Hop: 622 Stories
- Basketball: 449 Stories
- Economy: 438 Stories
- Football: 428 Stories
- Congress: 426 Stories
- NFL: 424 Stories
- NBA: 406 Stories
- Unemployment: 404 Stories
- Haiti: 394 Stories
- Film: 378 Stories
- New York: 377 Stories
- Election2012: 368 Stories
- Michael Jackson: 358 Stories
- Michelle Obama: 357 Stories
- Republicans: 356 Stories
- Murder: 348 Stories
- Democrats: 334 Stories
- Education: 304 Stories



COMMENT NOW
print