Marriage licenses in Indiana are obtained from the County Clerk where you live or where the marriage will be held. There is a difference in the fee based on whether you are a resident of the county. Using the free website "Indiana Vital Statistics Directory" you can access either a direct link or contact information for each Indiana county so you can get the information for your specific County.
Each county in Indiana has its own rules for obtaining marriage licenses. The below link will connect you to the website "Free Public Records Directory" for Indiana. Look up the County where you live and then click on "Marriage Licenses." There will be either a direct link to the County office or contact information for licenses.
To apply for a marriage license in Indiana, both you and your future spouse must appear in person at the Clerk's Office in an Indiana county where one of you resides, or for non-residents in the Indiana county where the marriage will be solemnized.
There has not been a ruling in the supreme court of Indiana over the constitutionality of Indiana's ban on same-sex marriage.
Ruth M. Slevin has written: 'Pike County, Indiana, marriage records, 1859-1905' -- subject(s): Genealogy, Marriage records 'Scott County, Indiana, marriage records, 1848-1905' -- subject(s): Genealogy, Marriage records 'LaGrange County, Indiana, marriages, 1832-1880' -- subject(s): Genealogy, Marriage records 'Decatur County, Indiana, marriage records, 1878-1905' -- subject(s): Decatur County, Genealogy, Indiana, Marriage records 'Monroe County, Indiana will records, 1818-1904'
Move out of Indiana.
To get a copy of a marriage certificate in Indiana one can visit the Indiana State Department of Health or go to the ISDH Vital Records site. There will be a cost involved.
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The state republican party platform for Indiana does not mention same-sex marriage.
Yes, the state of Indiana's democratic party platform does include marriage equality.
Same-sex marriage became legal in Indiana on October 6, 2014, pursuant to the order of a United States District Court Judge which struck down Indiana's statutory ban on same-sex marriage as unconstitutional.
Same-sex marriage is legal in Indiana because the Supreme Court ruling in the case of Obergefell v. Hodges in 2015 declared that same-sex couples have the constitutional right to marry nationwide. This landmark decision invalidated state laws prohibiting same-sex marriage, including Indiana's previous ban.
No. A marriage equality bill has never been introduced in the Indiana legislature.
As of October 6, 2014, there are no longer any obstacles to the legalization of same-sex marriage in Indiana.