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The New Hampshire Division of Vital Records Administration is the state resource for residents who wish to obtain records of birth, marriage, divorce and death events. DVRA also has a genealogical research vault that is open to the public containing records that date back to the year 1640.
If you are a New Hampshire resident then your status as an ordained minister is all the authority you need to officiate weddings in the State. If you are not a New Hampshire resident but plan on officiating a wedding in New Hampshire then you will have to register with the New Hampshire Secretary of State.
Couples wanting to be joined in marriage, whose ceremonies will be occurring in the State of New Hampshire, may obtain a marriage license from any New Hampshire city/town clerks office. The state-set fee for a marriage license is $50.
Whether a civil or church authority performed the ceremony, local laws usually required that the marriage be recorded in civil records. Marriage has always been a very public covenant, recorded in a variety of ways.
Divorce records are considered private and confidential, with access limited to those individuals who have a direct and tangible interest in the record. The only exception is divorce records more than 50 years old which are considered public and are open to the public.

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Within 10 days after the marriage ceremony, the officiant (pastor, priest, minister, notary public, etc.) must fill out and sign the marriage license. The marriage license must then be dropped off or mailed to our office locations to be recorded in the Official Records.
New Hampshire is a Closed Record State, which means that only certain individuals have access to birth, death, marriage or divorce records. Access is granted to the individual the record belongs to, their immediate family members or someone who establishes a direct and tangible interest in the record.
You can access vital records, including marriage records, online or in person at the courthouse of the city where the marriage was likely to occur, and you can usually see a copy for free or for a small fee. Make sure to look for divorce records too: just because they got married before doesnt mean they still are.

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