I wrote a blog post some time back about the marriage record of two of my husband’s ancestors, John Garver and Mary Anne Overly. One of the statements that had to sworn to in the State of Ohio in in 1848 was that the spouse was “not nearer of kin to me than first cousin.”
That led me wonder about the legality today of marrying
one’s first cousin today… And what I
found out surprised me: It’s still legal
in many states! I had no idea!
I started out by looking at the National Council of State Legislatures website. There I learned that first cousin marriage is
legal without restriction in today nineteen states and the District of Columbia—although
North Carolina does stipulate that double-cousin marriage is prohibited. (That would be two people who are cousins
through both parental lines, therefore meaning that they share both sets of grandparents.) In twenty five other states, first cousin
marriage is prohibited.
In the remaining six states, first cousin marriage is
allowed under certain circumstances.
Five of those states (Arizona, Illinois, Indiana, Utah, and Wisconsin)
require that the couple be either too old to have children (minimum age
requirements of age 50, 55, or 65) or medically unable to reproduce. The last (Maine) requires that the couple
obtain a physician’s certificate of genetic counseling.
Second cousins may legally marry in all states.
So, those are the hard, cold facts… But the larger question for me was, what kind
of person does this? How does it happen
that two people come to the place in life where they fall in love with, and desire
to marry, a first cousin?
For that viewpoint, I turned to a website called
CousinCouples.com. The website discusses
the legalities, genetics, and history of first and second cousin marriage. There are also discussion boards where
cousins can share their stories, problems, and even wedding videos. One thing resonates in their stories: Their friends and families, almost without
exception, disapproved. Some of them say
that their ministers had a problem with it, while others were married in their
regular church. Those who live in states
where first cousin marriage is prohibited can still legally marry by having the
marriage take place in another state where it is allowed.
On the website’s “Facts Page” they report that no European
country, nor Mexico nor Canada, prohibit first cousin marriage, and that the
frequency of cousin marriages in the United States is about 1 in 1,000. They also state that “Children of non-related
couples have a 2-3% risk of birth defects, as opposed to first cousins having a
4-6% risk.”
Not much difference? I
found that hard to believe—but the facts
seem to back it up, based on a landmark study published in 2002 in the Journal of Genetic Counseling. This study was referred to in almost every
source I consulted, including a 20/20 television piece presented by John
Stossel in August 2004 and a 2009 article in The New York Times. More recent studies have come to the same
conclusion. The 20/20 article also said that
every year in America, about 200,000 first cousins wed.
Statistics aside, bad things can happen, even if,
statistically, they usually don’t... One
of my clients who knew I was writing a blog post on the topic of cousin
marriage shared this personal story with me: “My husband's aunt married her first cousin.
They had three sons. The first one was born with severe arthritis and was crippled
at a very young age, as well as being born almost legally blind. The second son
was born mentally impaired and also almost legally blind, and he passed away
quite young. The third son was born completely deaf. The boys also had a
very unusual appearance.”
Among notable figures in history who married a first cousin
are Johann Sebastian Bach, Werner von Braun, Charles Darwin, Albert Einstein,
Edgar Allen Poe, Queen Victoria, and H.G. Wells. But—with no offense to my first cousins intended—for
me it is still definitely too close for comfort!
Image: bigstockphoto.com
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