Gretna Greens in the United States

A Gretna Green is a favored marriage place. When a couple runsaway from their home area to get married in a place with fewer marriage restrictions, the place they go is often called a "Gretna Green." They may want to marry at a younger age, want to wait a shorter period after obtaining a licence, want to avoid procedures such as blood tests, want a less expensive marriage, or want to marry a closer cousin than their home district will allow. Or they may find eloping romantic. When enough couples resort to a particular place it may gain a reputation as a Gretna Green.

The original Gretna Green is a town by that name, famous for runaway marriages, and just over the border in south Scotland. When English laws prohibited marriage under the age of 21, some younger couples crossed the border and the first town on the road was Gretna Green.

In popular tradition blacksmiths and anvils have become associated symbols of such marriages. Scottish law allowed anyone to perform a marriage if a declaration were made in front of two witnesses. The blacksmiths of Gretna came to be called "anvil priests."

In common law, a "Gretna Green marriage" means a marriage transacted in a jurisdiction that was not the residence of the parties being married, to avoid restrictions or procedures imposed by the parties' home jurisdiction.[3]

Gretna Greens in the United States
Maryland, Cecil, Elkton for Philadelphia, New York City, and New England