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Justices of the Peace marriage records http://nutrias.org/inv/jpmarrindex/richi_ril.htm Groom's Name Bride's Name Widow's Name Date Call Number Page(s) Notes To order copies of Justices of the Peace marriage records, your request must be sent by regular mail to the Louisiana Division, New Orleans Public Library, 219 Loyola Ave., New Orleans, LA 70112. Our fee is $2.00 to copy each record. Please send check or money order payable to New Orleans Public Library., and the exact reference(s) from this index. Please limit requests to five records at a time. Please also note that the records indexed here were filmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah and can be obtained from any Mormon Family History Center. http://www.neworleanspubliclibrary.org/~nopl/inv/jpmarrindex/jpmarrindex.htm The Licenses, generally, are printed forms in three parts: first, a statement of two witnesses swearing that the parties applying for the license are over the age of twenty-one, signed by the justice of the peace granting the license; second, a bond posted by the groom and attested to by one witness as security that no legal impediment to the marriage existed when the license was granted (should no such impediment appear within two years, the obligation was voided); third, a statement giving consent for a minor to be married, including the minor's age and the signature of the family member consenting to the marriage and of the justice of the peace. In the case of minors, age is recorded. Sometimes, the name of the minister or magistrate licensed to perform the ceremony is also recorded. The forms, of course, are dated. The Marriage Certificates are for marriages performed by the Justices of the Peace themselves. (With the exception of a few volumes of certificates returned to Justices of the Peace as proof of marriage, certificates for ceremonies performed by priests, ministers or other celebrants are available only in church records or, after 1870, in the records of the Board of Health.) Although the actual wording of the certificates (usually printed forms) varies over time, all certificates give the following information: date of marriage and names of bride, groom, three witnesses, and the justice of the peace performing the ceremony. Records from the antebellum period, certificates and licenses alike, include some free black persons, and a few slaves. Post-1864 records include all segments of the population. A card index to the records, arranged by name of bride and groom, is located in the Louisiana Division. Since the page numbers on the cards do not appear in the microfilmed records, it is essential to note the call number (e.g., VEB678) and date shown on an individual card. If you do not find a known or suspected marriage listed in the index, you may want to search for an unindexed document. A guide to the boundaries of Justice of the Peace districts is available in the Louisiana Division. |
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