Crowds Gather for Gay Weddings in Mass.
BOSTON - Like fans anxious for concert tickets, same-sex couples
waited in line for hours Sunday outside Cambridge's City Hall for an
event they once thought they'd never get to experience: marriage.
Marcia Hams, 56, and her partner, Susan Shepherd, 52, of Cambridge,
showed up at midnight Saturday � a full 24 hours ahead of time � to
stake out the first spot in line where the city clerk was to hand out
the nation's first state-sanctioned gay marriage applications.
"People do this for Red Sox tickets, concert tickets," said Hams, a
health care advocate who has been with Shepherd, a graduate student,
for 27 years. "Certainly we can do it for this."
The couple, one of five stationed outside city hall by mid-afternoon,
sat in lawn chairs, donned rain jackets to protect themselves from a
light drizzle and drank plenty of coffee. Sunday morning, a young man
approached them and gave them a large red flower, saying, "I wish you
a long and happy marriage."
Cambridge, across the Charles River from Boston and home to Harvard
University, decided to seize the earliest moment to begin the process
of granting same-sex couples the historic right that gay-rights
advocates are seeking in dozens of states. Mayor Michael Sullivan
planned to help cut a three-tiered wedding cake to mark the occasion,
and people around the state also held celebrations.
Alex Fennel, 27, and her partner, Sasha Hartman, 29, were in line at
Cambridge, happy they didn't have to wait until later Monday morning
to begin the marriage process. Same-sex weddings were expected to
begin later Monday morning, once judges grant couples' requests to
waive standard waiting periods.
"We came here because I've been waiting seven years and I don't want
to wait another day, another second," said Fennel, a lawyer from
Boston. "For me, it's excitement and gratitude. It's nothing I ever
thought we would be able to do."
Massachusetts was thrust into the center of the nationwide debate on
gay marriage when the state's Supreme Judicial Court issued its 4-3
ruling in November that gays and lesbians had a right under the state
constitution to wed.
In the days leading up to Monday's deadline for same-sex weddings to
begin, opponents looked to the federal courts for help in overturning
the ruling. On Friday, the U.S. Supreme Court (news - web sites)
declined to intervene.
The Massachusetts ruling touched off a frenzy of gay marriages across
the country earlier this year, emboldening officials in San
Francisco, upstate New York and Portland, Ore., to issue marriage
licenses as acts of civil disobedience. Even though courts ordered a
halt to the wedding march, opponents pushed for a federal
constitutional ban on gay marriage, which President Bush (news - web
sites) has endorsed.
The ruling also galvanized opponents of gay marriage in
Massachusetts, prompting lawmakers in this heavily Democratic, Roman
Catholic state to adopt a state constitutional amendment that would
ban same-sex marriage but legalize Vermont-style civil unions. The
earliest it could wind up on the ballot is 2006 � possibly casting a
shadow on the legality of thousands of gay marriages that could take
place in the intervening years.
As of Monday, Massachusetts joins the Netherlands, Belgium and
Canada's three most populous provinces as the only places worldwide
where gays can marry, though the rest of Canada is expected to follow
soon.
Across the state on Sunday, gay-rights advocates held "Countdown to
Equality" parties to celebrate the impending nuptials and to keep
attention focused on the political fights ahead.
"I have a younger crowd of friends and I wanted to create some
awareness," said Josiah Richards, who was hosting a barbecue for
about 35 people in Boston's West Roxbury neighborhood on Sunday.
Several churches held ceremonies honoring gay parishioners and
recognizing the fight they've waged for marriage rights.
Robert Compton and David Wilson � one of the seven plaintiff couples
in the lawsuit that led to the state court's landmark ruling �
attended services at Arlington Street Church in Boston a day before
they will exchange vows in the church.
Monday marks the culmination of a legal battle by the couples that
began in April 2001 after they were denied marriage licenses. Clerks
in the state's 351 cities and towns have made plans to bring in
volunteers and expand their work space in anticipation of a deluge of
couples.
Opponents of gay marriage planned protests Monday and promise to
continue to fight the state high court ruling and to pursue state and
federal amendments banning gay marriage.
Out-of-state gay couples, meanwhile are likely to challenge the
state's 1913 marriage statute, which Gov. Mitt Romney, a gay-marriage
opponent, has cited to limit marriages to only Massachusetts
residents. The law, which gay-rights advocates have labeled
discriminatory, bars out-of-state couples from marrying in
Massachusetts if the union would be illegal in their home state.
Several local officials, including those in Provincetown, Worcester
and Somerville, have said they will not enforce Romney's order and
will give licenses to any couples who ask, as long as they sign the
customary affidavit attesting that they know of no impediment to
their marriage.
In Provincetown, visitors were greeted with a sign that
read "Congratulations, newlyweds!"
"It's the next evolution in the history of marriage," said John
Yarbrough of Minnesota, who traveled to Provincetown to marry his
partner, Cody Rogahn. "The idea of who you love shouldn't be dictated
by the government."
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