Find Montgomery County Marriage License

Montgomery County Marriage License records are centered in Clarksville, and the county gives you both current office details and a strong historical record trail. The research says the clerk handles marriage licenses and that online application is available through the Tennessee County Clerks portal. It also says marriage records run from 1838 to the present, with some pre-1838 records lost in an 1878 courthouse fire. That makes Montgomery County useful for both live applications and historical searches, but it also means older records need a careful approach. The county seat is Clarksville, so that is the place to start.

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Montgomery County Marriage License Facts

1838 Marriage Records Start
Clarksville County Seat
1878 Courthouse Fire
$107.50 Standard Fee

Montgomery County Marriage License Office

The county clerk source gives Montgomery County a clear office anchor. It names Kellie Jackson as the clerk, lists the address as 350 Pageant Lane, Suite 502, Clarksville, TN 37040, and gives the phone number as (931) 648-5711. That is the place to start if you need a current Montgomery County Marriage License. The research also says the office handles vehicle licenses, business licenses, passports, notary work, and marriage licenses. So the marriage desk is part of a bigger office, not a separate lane.

The county also fits well with the state clerk portal. The Tennessee County Clerks portal lets couples complete a pre-application online before they visit the Clarksville office. That saves time. It does not replace the clerk visit, but it does shorten it. If you need a Montgomery County Marriage License, that is the cleanest first move for a modern application.

Montgomery County Clerk is the county source for the current clerk details and marriage-license duties.

Montgomery County Marriage License office and clerk information

The clerk image is the right lead for a Montgomery County Marriage License page because it reflects the current office and contact path in Clarksville.

Montgomery County Marriage License Search

Montgomery County has a clear record start and a clear loss point. The TN GenWeb marriage records page says the county was formed in 1796, the courthouse was destroyed by fire in April 1878, and marriage records survive from 1838 to the present, with some earlier papers lost. That means a Montgomery County Marriage License search is usually workable, but you should not assume every early marriage survived. The county genealogy page agrees that the county clerk has marriage records from 1838. That is the date to use when you are deciding how far back to search.

For older records, the TN GenWeb Montgomery County Marriage Records page is a useful historical bridge. It is not a substitute for the clerk office, but it helps when a name or year is uncertain. If the marriage predates the clerk file or falls into the fire loss period, a county history page or state archive search may be necessary.

Montgomery County genealogy research confirms the 1838 county clerk marriage record start.

Montgomery County Marriage License historical records at TN GenWeb

That source is especially useful when you need a historical marriage record range rather than a same-day clerk transaction.

Montgomery County Marriage License Requirements

The Montgomery County fee schedule in the deeper research is specific. It lists a marriage license fee of $107.50 without counseling and $47.50 with counseling. It also says the online application is available through the Tennessee County Clerk portal. In addition, the county lists in-person certified copies at $5.00. Those details make Montgomery County one of the more concrete places in the research for planning a visit.

The statewide Tennessee rules still apply. Both parties should appear together, bring photo ID, and bring Social Security information if issued. Tennessee does not require a blood test or waiting period, and the license is valid for 30 days anywhere in the state. If either spouse was married before, the final divorce date or date of death belongs in the file. Those rules are the ones the Montgomery County clerk applies.

For a Montgomery County Marriage License visit, bring these items:

  • Photo ID for both applicants
  • Social Security information if issued
  • Premarital counseling certificate if you want the lower fee
  • Prior divorce date or date of death if either person was previously married

Montgomery County Marriage License Copies

Copy work in Montgomery County is simple enough if you know the route. The deeper research says in-person certified copies cost $5.00 and mail requests go to Montgomery County Clerk, P.O. Box 1363, Clarksville, TN 37041. That is a practical local path. If the record is older or if you are working through a historical search, the TN GenWeb marriage records page and the county genealogy page can help you pin down the range before you ask for a certified copy.

For records that have moved out of current county custody, the Tennessee Office of Vital Records and TSLA are the next stops. TSLA can search indexed minutes and county records, while the state vital records office covers the current 50-year marriage certificate window. A Montgomery County Marriage License copy search is much easier when you decide first whether you need a current certificate or an older archive copy.

Montgomery County Marriage License Records

The historical record set in Montgomery County is good but not perfect. The 1878 fire destroyed many papers, so some early pre-1838 records are gone. Even so, the county clerk's marriage records from 1838 and the long-rumored local books still make this county a useful search place. If you are tracing family history, the county seat of Clarksville gives you a concrete office anchor and a historical start date. That is often enough to keep the search moving.

Montgomery County also has broader county records available through archives, probate, and court record indexes. Those can help if a marriage search turns into a wider family reconstruction. If the couple married in the fire-loss period, a surrounding record or newspaper notice may be the best proof. That is why the historical source set matters just as much as the clerk office.

TSLA FAQs and the county history pages are useful when a Montgomery County Marriage License search needs extra context beyond the clerk office.

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