Marriage license 1947
Submit Wiki Content Report a Problem. More marriage information is usually found on the marriage license application or the marriage register. Less information is found on the marriage certificate. Marriage Records Choose a time period: Before to to Present Marriage year unknown.
Idaho, County Marriages, United States Marriages, Idaho, County Marriages, - use your Ancestry subscription. Idaho Marriages, ; Western States Marriage Index. Tips for searching online indexes. When ordering Idaho marriage records: Ask for the marriage license or the marriage register, not the marriage certificate. The license or register usually contains more information.
Idaho Marriage Index, Extinct Co. Alternately, you can also try ordering a copy from the exact city clerk or town clerk, which may be faster than dealing with Albany but which might only provide a typed extract of the information on the certificate or license, instead of a photocopy version.
This data is in the public domain. There are no usage restrictions or copyrights attached to it. Feel free to use it however you'd like. For more information on the group Reclaim The Records, please visit our website at www. We're a c 3 non-profit organization, and donations are welcome. Uploaded by Asparagirl on October 3, Internet Archive's 25th Anniversary Logo. Search icon An illustration of a magnifying glass.
User icon An illustration of a person's head and chest. Sign up Log in. Web icon An illustration of a computer application window Wayback Machine Texts icon An illustration of an open book. Images of those certificates are also freely available to the public on FamilySearch microfilms, and a text transcription of the information in those certificates is also freely searchable on the FamilySearch website, although the actual images are not online.
There are two complementary indices to those Health Department certificates, known as the Brides Index and the Grooms Index. Those index cards of the Brides Index and the Grooms Index were then microfilmed, and you can view the films onsite at the Municipal Archives building in New York, or you can view them on FamilySearch microfilms. In recent years, these indices have been turned into free online searchable databases, transcribed through the hard work of the volunteers in the non-profit Italian Genealogical Group IGG.
But the information presented here is the index to the other set of marriage records , the ones that are not nearly as well known. And they are not the usual two-page certificates. Instead, they are a three-page document set, consisting of 1 the application of the couple wishing to get married, 2 the affidavit from the couple stating that they are legally allowed to get married, and 3 the marriage license granted to the couple so that they could go get married at a date in the near future.
Therefore, the dates of the documents listed in this index were sometimes several days or weeks before the marriage, not always the same date that the wedding took place. The three-page City Clerk's Office document set usually has more information contained in it than the two-page Health Department marriage certificate. This record set is only the index to the three-page City Clerk's Office documents. If you find a name of a relative or other person of interest in this index, you can then place an order with either the New York City Municipal Archives or the City Clerk's Office for a copy of the full three-page City Clerk's Office affidavit, application, and license.
Please pay attention to the exact wording; this is not the same thing as a marriage certificate. Make sure you understand what you are ordering. Unfortunately, the NYC Municipal Archives does not yet have an online form for ordering these documents.
In your letter, make sure to list the full name of the bride or groom, the full name of the person's spouse if you know it, the borough, the volume number if listed in the index , the page number if listed in the index , the document number, and the date of the document month, day, and year.
Remember that the date of these documents might be a few days or even weeks before the wedding took place. Finally, we request that you please add the following line, or something like it, to your letter: "I was made aware of this information through the not-for-profit group Reclaim The Records, and their work to put genealogical data online for free public use. Copies of the three-page document set for to the present are stored at the New York City Clerk's Office , and marriage records that are more than fifty years old -- i.
That means that if you want to order a copy of a record between and , you can do so from the City Clerk's Office. Unfortunately, they do not yet have an online form for requesting records and providing payment. Instead, you can print, complete, and mail the PDF form on their website with your payment.
You can also visit them in person and drop off your form and payment right at their office, which will likely get you your records much more quickly. Finally, we request that you please add the following line, or something like it, to the bottom of your form: "I was made aware of this information through the not-for-profit group Reclaim The Records, and their work to put genealogical data online for free public use.
Copies of the three-page document set for to the present are stored at the New York City Clerk's Office, but records that are less than fifty years old -- i.
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