December 2015 Moms

Courthouse wedding with ceremony later?

I don't know where to ask this and you guys seem knowledgeable on most things.
So, SO and I have planned on getting married next summer for a little while now. We hadn't announced it, yet and planned on something small. For many reasons, some personal and some legal, we decided that we would like to be married before the baby is born. It doesn't bother me to have a courthouse wedding. But I've always a traditional wedding with my Father walking me down the aisle. I am the oldest daughter and my sisters are quite a bit younger than me, my father has health problems and I don't want to take away his possible only chance of giving one of us away. We don't have the time or means to throw together a small wedding before baby, though. Is there anyway we can go about doing a traditional, small Church ceremony perhaps next summer? Maybe a vowel renewel kind of deal? We aren't interested in a registry, bachelor/bachelorette parties and we can fund it on our own.
Thoughts?
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Re: Courthouse wedding with ceremony later?

  • You can do whatever you want. I know several people who did a courthouse marriage with a wedding that followed later. If you're concerned about some family members possibly missing out, then invite them to the courthouse ceremony.
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  • From what I've gathered, this is an unpopular concept on the bump. Personally I feel like vow renewals are for like 50th anniversaries etc and you should pick either a city hall/court house thing or a church wedding. I think if you really wanted to be married before baby arrives you can pull together a small church wedding before.
  • I say make it happen. Sounds like a lit of meaning to having it sooner than later. We moved up our wedding 4.5 months to get married before my dad passed away. Which lead to us expecting our first. If there's a will, there's a way. There is nothing more important than family and I would have given anything to have my dad give me away.
  • Personally i feel like people who do a courthouse wedding then a 'real wedding' with all the trimmings after the fact are devaluing their actual wedding. Which was at the courthouse and still something to be honored and celebrated.

    As you said there is nothing wrong with a courthouse wedding. Is there a reason your dad wouldn't be able to present you and be your witness for that? Is it important to you to also be married in the church?

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  • I say do whatever you want, but Im not sure that all church's allow wedding ceremonies if the couple is already legally married. Don't know for sure, but something to consider.

    I've only see the courthouse marriage with a ceremony somewhere else later when the second place wasn't a church.
  • Courthouse for the win! I'm "old fashioned", and think that babies should come after weddings.... So yeah, there's my personal bias. Get hitched now, have a party later, and get a fancy dress once you have your body back. Marriage is about the legal commitment to one another anyway, not the pretty dress. :)

    Plus it'll be way easier for baby (and you) to have parents with the same last name!! :D
  • edited September 2015
    It's totally up to you -- its your wedding! My hubby and I did a city hall wedding with just our two closest friends as witnesses as we were time crunched before our overseas move. Then the following summer we threw a real reception and had a minister friend take us through our vows to each other again and do a lovely bit on the importance of our friends and family support for a marriage. Not a full ceremony, but that was just our personal choice.

    Congrats!
  • My hubby and I did that. We were engaged and our wedding was book and planned for October 2014. He is Canadian military and got posted the U.S. And we would have to move the August before. We decided to have a civil ceremony before so that I would be covered by health insurance right off the bat. It took 12 min. My mom and step dad were our witnesses.

    We had a lovely wedding the following October and my husbands aunt did the ceremony. And honestly, the price of officiants in my town, was ridiculous and this saves us like 200 bucks!
  • I say do what's best for you and what makes you happy! My husband is in the army so right before he was set to deploy for an entire year we went to the courthouse and were married. It was still important to the both of us to have a larger church ceremony and reception. So while he was deployed for that year I planned our wedding. It was one of the best days of our lives! not only was it our wedding, but it was also like a giant welcome home party for my husband!
  • For those of you who had two weddings, what day do you celebrate? 

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  • Honestly this affects no one but you & your SO. If it were me, I would just plan a small wedding prior to the arrival of your LO so your dad can walk you down, everyone's happy, doesn't have to be fancy but it can be very nice. And it's doable to plan quickly and inexpensively, it just puts a limit on # guests, etc. IF you are set on a courthouse and follow up with the big ceremony/reception later, just make sure folks know you're already wed. It's strange but soooo many people get all huffy about it "not being the real wedding" & feel like they've been lied to, etc. Again, not a huge deal to me but to many (esp older folks) it's an issue.
  • My husband and I had a courthouse wedding. Well sort of. The pastor came to the building we were living in and married us in the garden, so it was just the 3 of us... We already had our wedding planned for 6 months later and so our pastor was very understanding. He even let us save sharing our personal vows for in front of our families later on. My husband is from a different country and it made it easier for us legally to stay together and move across the U.S. to be near my family. We announced before our wedding that we were already legally married but still wanted a wedding to celebrate it with both of our families... Everyone understood and was very supportive.

    Moral of the story, do whatever you need to do! Don't worry about anyone else. If a courthouse wedding now makes it easier for your future, then go for it. You can always have a wedding celebration later on!
  • I say do it!!!
  • Nothing wrong with a courthouse wedding. Most allow small number of guests. But if you've always wanted "church traditional" that's up to you. We did courthouse and paid for professional photographer to have nice pictures, but neither of us wanted a big wedding anyways. Good luck with everything!!
  • I agree with the others that it is absolutely your choice and you should do what is best for you and your SO. However, I just wanted to add that it is totally possible to plan a small wedding in a short amount of time. I wanted to be married before DD1 was born, and was able to pull together a wedding for 150+ guests rather quickly. It was exactly 3 months and 15 days from the day we got engaged to the day we got married. It wasn't super expensive either. We put a lot of it on credit cards, but had them paid off in less than a year, I think.

    So if you want the church wedding, I say go for it! It's not impossible. :) But if the courthouse route with a bigger celebration later fits you better, then that will be just as meaningful. :) GL!


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  • hummingbird35hummingbird35 member
    edited September 2015
    I'm sort of struggling with this too, but for insurance purposes. I'm still a dependent on my mom's insurance until i turn 26 and the birth & doc appointments are all covered, but I wouldn't be eligible for dependent status if I got married. We just got engaged in August... I think we're going to wait until next year in the fall to have a small wedding (because I want to have a chance to get my body back, get into our routine as parents). Baby will be covered on my fiancé's insurance for any after-birth procedures. BUT my birthday is in Jan, so if we need to be married for me to get on his insurance, we were thinking of doing a private courthouse marriage and a bigger reception later on. I could also get insurance through my work if we decide that's a better option... still figuring out the details (more worried about baby presently)!

    @sarahgn I don't want to intrude at all, but are your father's health issues an immediate issue? If not, I see no reason why you shouldn't just wait until the summer to do it (the ceremony) how you want! Getting married legally beforehand shouldn't detract from the important parts of the ceremony (having your family and friends there to support a big change in your life, having your father walk you down the aisle)... what PP said about waiting to do your vows was an interesting idea too so it wouldn't really be a 'renewal.' 

    eta Sorry our little family isn't up to some of your standards because we're not married  
    8-| marriage should never be a choice made out of fear of what other people think, or something you do because it'll 'look good' IMO.


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  • I got married by a justice of the peace in port royal 16 years ago at sunset. It took all of 10 minutes and I regret nothing. :)
  • I have a few friends who are military wives and all of them had a courthouse wedding and then a larger ceremony later. I don't see anything wrong with it and their larger weddings were still special and wonderful experiences.
  • Honestly this affects no one but you & your SO. If it were me, I would just plan a small wedding prior to the arrival of your LO so your dad can walk you down, everyone's happy, doesn't have to be fancy but it can be very nice. And it's doable to plan quickly and inexpensively, it just puts a limit on # guests, etc. IF you are set on a courthouse and follow up with the big ceremony/reception later, just make sure folks know you're already wed. It's strange but soooo many people get all huffy about it "not being the real wedding" & feel like they've been lied to, etc. Again, not a huge deal to me but to many (esp older folks) it's an issue.
    This exactly. I'm one of the ones who gets bothered by it. You have one wedding - the day you become legally married to your SO.

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  • I've known lots of people that have done it but most that want a real ceremony actually don't tell anyone about the courthouse wedding...so their families think the ceremony is the legal wedding. It is fairly common in young dual military couples...because they have to be married not just engaged to be sent to the same location so it happens for many military college sweethearts. They generally have a real wedding in 6-12 months. I've known a few that did a tight timeline destination wedding and a reception only within 12-18 months.
  • UwannalalaUwannalala member
    edited September 2015
    People are so flipping uptight. I can't believe anyone would get offended if you choose to get married (for whatever reason) at the courthouse and have a bigger "celebration" (wedding) at a later date.

    I completely understand wanting to have a "big wedding" with all your family and friends while wanting to have a smaller legal ceremony beforehand. A lot of girls dream of that big wedding  and if you have the means, who is anyone else to tell you that you don't deserve it just because you wanted to get "technically" married before baby comes? It's not like you are making everyone come to a vow renewel with gifts every year or something.. this is your one big celebration of marriage with your friends and family. 

    You have a very valid reason as to why you want to get married in the courthouse before baby, and just as valid of a reason as why you want to celebrate with a bigger wedding at  a later date. I don't see any reason for you to get "punished" (aka not have the "wedding of your dreams" if thats what you want) just because you wanted to get married before baby.  Of course, some people dream of a courthouse wedding only.. which is fine too. Whatever makes you happy!
  • I planned my full-fledged wedding in 3 months for 150 people because of an upcoming deployment, we had 6 months between engagement and deployment but obviously the last few months dates are crazy with training and changed deployment dates so we got married 3 months before anticipated deployment and took our honeymoon as his pre-deployment block leave. We made the decision because the military doesn't recognize engagements so if anything bad happend I wouldn't have been notified or had the ability to make medical decisions.
  • DH and I got married at the courthouse on March 29th 2015 basically on a whim. We had just bought a house, I got my gorgeous ring from Brilliant Earth, and both of us thought it would be a waste of money to have a wedding neither of us really wanted! He proposed on Christmas Eve 2014 and we went in March to just get our marriage license and we're going to plan a very small ceremony in Monterey or Carmel but realized even that would cost more than we wanted.
    Come to find out, I was actually already pregnant. We were trying since December 2014 and only in earnest in February and March with an OPK and we conceived on March 9th. So, I was 10 days pregnant and had no idea when we got married! I didn't find out until April 5th when I suddenly came down with bilateral pneumonia. So, we like to say our LO was our witness even though we didn't know it.
    We're our parents disappointed? Probably but they didn't express it. I was 29 at the time and the first of my mom's three girls to get married. DH had already been married and divorced all within one year around 5 years ago because his ex-wife decided to take on a boyfriend 8 or 9 months into their marriage. So, he wasn't into having a wedding. I also have never pictured having a wedding after my dad's suicide when I was 12 because he was the one person in he world who "got me" and there could never be another substitute to walk me down the aisle.
    We were going to go on a very nice honeymoon instead, but I have HG and a high risk pregnancy so even going on a babymoon wasn't possible. Luckily, since we had just got married two months before I quit my job for health concerns I was already on his insurance and just went from my former OB to my current within less than a week of requesting an appointment. So, things had a way of working out great even though we didn't really plan on all of it!
    You and your SO are both adults and it's completely up to you what you want to do. Don't let your family pressure you one way or another but I do agree with letting people know you are already married if you do choose to have another ceremony later.
    We are planning on taking a trip for our 5th anniversary to our original honeymoon destination and doing our own vows for a renewal ceremony since we didn't get to write our own the first time around.
    It's kind of crazy to think we will have a 3 and a half (or 4) month old on our first wedding anniversary. It's been a crazy year but we couldn't be more excited to welcome our little girl the same year we got married. It'll be a great story to tell her she was at our wedding as a tiny little being and we didn't even know yet!!
    Don't let judgey/selfish people dictate your plans. It's your life and a decision only yourself and your SO can make!!
  • I'm in agreement that if you have specific reasons for wanting to get married now, there's no reason why you can't have a vow renewal and celebration later.  

    DH and I got married after we had DD1 (we were already engaged and she was a surprise) but we chose to wait until after she was born.  We didn't have any legal issues but I realize that because your SO is military, there may be some benefits you won't have access to until you're married.  

    Do what you feel is best for you and your family.  I've had friends get married at the courthouse and it was just as meaningful to them as having a full blown Church wedding.  It's all what you make it.
  • Go for it. Especially if it is for legal reasons. The military takes quite a while to get everything processed. My husband and I were married at the DMV last December (lol, right? we didn't even get a courthouse wedding) and it wasn't until late March I was considered a spouse by the Army. The sooner you can get all of the paperwork done the better! Honestly, who cares what anyone thinks? It's your life, your marriage, so as long as you and your SO are happy no one elses opinion matters. :) A beautiful ceremony can be planned for later on down the road and I'm sure that being married already won't take anything away from that special day!
  • Again, just be honest and tell people you're already married. There's nothing wrong with celebrating your relationship but playing off a bigger ceremony as your first and official wedding is lying to those you love.

    It doesn't sound like that's your intention though, so that's good.

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  • Maybe it's because DH is military also, but I really don't think it's that strange or uncommon to get married at the courthouse now and have a big ceremony later.  We fortunately were able to have 6 months to put together a full wedding, but if your fiance is set to deploy in the next year or so (and, of course, you're sure you want to marry each other :) ) I would try to make it official as soon as possible.  I'm guessing you've looked into all this but depending on where you live and his rank, it could really change his benefits while on deployment.  

    We've had at least two sets of friends do similar things to this. One got married at the courthouse in a ceremony (she had some flowers and a white dress and family present) and then a few months later just threw a big reception (i.e. no exchanging of vows).  Another couple actually had two full weddings.  They were in the middle of planning just one big wedding when his deployment date moved a few months up and managed to throw together a small church wedding with a borrowed dress, last minute flowers, etc a few weeks before he left.  Their story got out to a local newspaper somehow and they were gifted a really nice second wedding at a country club a few months after his return. 

    Frankly, I agree that you should do what you were planning regardless.  If people know that your fiancee is in the military about to deploy though, on top of the baby situation, I really doubt any guests could fault you for already getting officially married before your ceremony.  
  • Gingermom15Gingermom15 member
    edited September 2015
    We certainly wouldn't keep it a secret from anyone that we would be legally married at the first ceremony. I do agree that sound deceitful if I had found out someone kept the secret and acted as though the ceremony was the first.
    @BostonBaby1 the second wedding would be mainly for religious purposes. I just wasn't sure how I felt initially if I would have considered the second ceremony real. It sounds like something common among military families and I wouldn't mind having two days to celebrate with my SO.
  • My brother and his wife did a small wedding with only my grandmother present. Her parents still don't know they married (oops) and they have been married for 5 going on 6 months. It was important to them to get married before they moved out of state. They will be doing a wedding next year with both families we think. My sister had her big wedding and promptly got pregnant with my niece. To her dismay she got married in a Methodist church, and the Roman Catholic Church will not recognize any marriage that did not take place in their church. So when my niece was being baptized they renewed their vows. It made for a lovely cerimoney and a funny video that definitely should be on america's funniest home videos because the priest said my name during the vows, no my brother in law does not take me as his wife, grosssss. do what you feel is best. I have been trying to talk to SO about us getting married before the baby comes but he doesn't feel we should rush into it just because of the baby, and wants my family to know he's marrying me for me not our daughter, still hurts. Do what you feel is best it will all work out.
  • edited September 2015
    SO and I got engaged about a month before we told anyone about baby. We knew and his proposal was a long time coming (according to him, for me it was out of left field, but I was very happy). We just assumed that we both wanted to wait until after the baby to tie the knot as we were the first children to be marrying on either side of our family so lots involved in the process.

    Now, SO has started to bring it up more and more, making it clear that he doesn't want to not be my husband for too much longer. We are looking into doing the courthouse wedding with only two witnesses present (his brother who introduced us and then someone from my side of family or a close friend) and keep it slightly DL until we are ready to throw our wedding reception after baby.

    Really, what it comes down to is whatever you and your SO want. You are the bride and he is the groom. Everything about this process is about you two and how you want to place each stone of the life you build together. Of course there are others to think about, but their desires in regards to this should not outweigh yours. 
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  • Wait, in what state can you get married at the DMV? @AudriannaMaria clarification please, is there a specific office you have to go to or is it based by county? How does this work?
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  • Wait, in what state can you get married at the DMV? @AudriannaMaria clarification please, is there a specific office you have to go to or is it based by county? How does this work?


    I was a little weirded out by that as well when we pulled up to the DMV. I don't have any legal info for you or anything. The only reason we went there was because it was a saturday. We are in CO. We went inside and waited for our number to be called, they made copies of our licenses and filled out our marriage certificate. No witnesses or anything. Apparently it's pretty easy to get married in CO lol.
  • Wait, in what state can you get married at the DMV? @AudriannaMaria clarification please, is there a specific office you have to go to or is it based by county? How does this work?
    I was a little weirded out by that as well when we pulled up to the DMV. I don't have any legal info for you or anything. The only reason we went there was because it was a saturday. We are in CO. We went inside and waited for our number to be called, they made copies of our licenses and filled out our marriage certificate. No witnesses or anything. Apparently it's pretty easy to get married in CO lol.



    That's interesting. I think I'm going to google that now...

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