GRETNA GREEN
THE MARRIAGE BUSINESS Mr Richard Rennison, the man who has married more than 2,000 couples over the anvil in the famous blacksmith’s shop at Gretna Green, recently revealed in evidence before the committee inquiring into Scotland’s marriage laws, how the business is conducted. Mr Rennison, who became caretaker at the blacksmith’s shop in 1927, declared that from time to time he had been out of pocket by marrying people. “ The usual fee charged by mo for marrying a couple,” he said, “ is one guinea, but there are times when I receive nothing.” Mr George Mackie, of Flosheud Farm, Gretna, the manager of the shop and employer of Mr Rennison, had told the committee that the blacksmith’s shop ceased to be a smithy in 1900. The sums received by Mr Rennison for marrying couples, ho said, varied from nothing to £2O. He denied a suggestion that he employed Mr Rennison because he thought he was good at the business of bluffing. Mr Rennison, in his evidence, declared that he was willing to marry couples at any time of the day or night, and that if he was not available his wife undertook to conduct the marriages. “ When couples come to the shop,” he said, “ I ask them if they have the necessary 21 days’ residence in Scotland. When they have satisfied me on this point, I ask them for their witnesses. If they have none I supply the witnesses, to whom I pay a fee of 2s 6d. During the summer season at Gretna, the busy season, I keep five people ready to act as witnesses. In reply to questions on the fees charged for marrying couples, Mr Rennison said : “ I am not what you call a money grabber. All I want is to live. Neither am I a priest. I do not wish to bo a priest.”
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Evening Star, Issue 22367, 17 June 1936, Page 18
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309GRETNA GREEN Evening Star, Issue 22367, 17 June 1936, Page 18
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