Find Trousdale County Marriage Records

Trousdale County Marriage Records start with the county clerk in Hartsville and then move outward to FamilySearch, TSLA, the Tennessee Department of Health, and public archive tools when the record is older or you need a certified state copy. That local first step matters because the clerk issues the license, records the return, and provides the county copy most people need first. Trousdale County was established in 1870 from Macon, Smith, Sumner, and Wilson counties, so the same office can help with a fresh request or a historical search. If you already know the names and the year, you can usually narrow the request fast.

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Trousdale County Quick Facts

1870 County Established
Hartsville County Seat
$97.50 Marriage License
$5.00 Certified Copy

Trousdale County Marriage Records Office

The Trousdale County Clerk is the main office for Trousdale County Marriage Records. That office issues marriage licenses, records the returned license, and handles certified copy requests. The courthouse is in Hartsville, which makes the county seat the best place to start when you know the marriage happened in Trousdale County. Staff can help with current licenses and older county book entries, so the same office serves both new requests and family history work.

The county clerk website at trousdalecountytn.gov/county-clerk is the local source for office details and copy request direction. Both applicants must appear together in person, and the clerk needs valid photo ID plus Social Security numbers or affidavits if a number is not available. The license is valid for 30 days and must be returned within 3 days after the ceremony. If either person was married before, the office may ask for divorce or death documentation.

A source view from the Trousdale County Clerk shows the office that handles Trousdale County Marriage Records, license issuance, and certified-copy requests.

Trousdale County marriage records guide at the Tennessee State Library and Archives

That archive guide helps when the Trousdale County book is not enough and you need the historic microfilm path.

Office Trousdale County Clerk
Trousdale County Courthouse
200 East Main Street
Hartsville, TN 37074
Hours Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 4:00 PM Central Time
Phone (615) 374-2956
Fax (615) 374-2957
Website trousdalecountytn.gov/county-clerk

How to Search Trousdale County Marriage Records

Start with the county clerk if you want the most direct result. Recent Trousdale County Marriage Records are usually easiest to handle there. If the marriage is older, the search may move into FamilySearch, TSLA, or TeVA. The right route depends on the year and how much detail you already have. Names, county, and a rough date will get you farther than a broad search with no date at all.

The county history page at FamilySearch Trousdale County genealogy is a useful research aid. It points to records from 1870 to 1880, 1880 to 1965, and the county index from 1870 to 1975. Those collections help when the clerk file is worn, the family spelling changes, or you need a clue for a request letter. Trousdale County researchers often use the county clerk and FamilySearch together.

If you want TSLA staff to search for you, the TSLA order records portal lets you submit a fee-based request with names, dates, and the county of marriage. That path works best when the record is historic and you need archive staff to search the film or index. TSLA can then mail or email a copy if it finds the record.

The archive guide at TSLA vital records guide explains how older Tennessee marriage records are split between county files and state holdings. That matters in Trousdale County because the county began keeping marriage records long before statewide registration started in 1945. For older records, the county name and the marriage year are the best clues you can bring.

To start a search, gather these details first:

  • Full names of both spouses
  • Approximate marriage date or year
  • County and, if known, the city of marriage
  • Photo ID if you are ordering a certified copy

Historical Trousdale County Marriage Records

Trousdale County was established in 1870 from Macon, Smith, Sumner, and Wilson counties, and the record run begins there. That long record span helps when you are tracing a family that stayed in North Central Tennessee. The FamilySearch notes show Trousdale County Marriage Records from 1870 to 1880 and 1880 to 1965, plus an index from 1870 to 1975. If one source misses a marriage, another may still catch it.

The Tennessee State Library and Archives can help with older Trousdale County Marriage Records when the county clerk book is not enough. The state archive guide explains the date ranges, search requirements, and the difference between county-held books and statewide records. That is useful because Trousdale County history includes marriages that are much older than the modern vital-records office and may only survive in the archive set.

A linked image from the Tennessee Department of Health vital records page shows the state certificate path for recent Trousdale County Marriage Records.

Trousdale County marriage records and Tennessee Department of Health vital records access

That state office is the right place to check when you need a modern Tennessee marriage certificate rather than a county ledger copy.

TeVA also gives Trousdale County researchers a free way to view many public marriage records online. Its marriage collection includes records over 50 years old, marriage indexes, county marriage registers on microfilm, and marriage bonds. Search by county, date range, name, or certificate number, then check the image or PDF. For some lines, that online view is faster than a mail request.

Trousdale County Marriage Records Fees

Trousdale County uses the standard Tennessee fee pattern for marriage work. A marriage license costs $97.50. If you bring an approved premarital course certificate, the fee drops to $37.50. Certified copies cost $5.00 each. Those are the basic costs most people need, and they make it easy to plan before you go to the courthouse in Hartsville.

The clerk accepts cash, check, or money order. If you are asking by mail, include the names, the marriage date, your contact information, and payment. That gives the clerk enough detail to search the county book or the return copy. If you are in person, bring the same details and a valid photo ID. The office is used to both new license work and later copy requests, so it is the cleanest place to ask about current fees before you travel.

For a modern Tennessee certificate, the state office is the right source. The Tennessee Department of Health, Office of Vital Records page at tn.gov/health/health-program-areas/vital-records.html explains the statewide marriage certificate path and the fee structure for records from 1974 forward.

A source-linked image from the Tennessee Office of Open Records Counsel shows the public records guide that helps with older Trousdale County Marriage Records.

Tennessee open records guidance for Trousdale County marriage records

That guidance helps when you want to know whether the record should be open and which office should answer the request.

Note: County and state fees can change, so confirm the current amount with the Trousdale County Clerk or the Tennessee Office of Vital Records before you go.

Trousdale County Marriage Records Access

Access to Trousdale County Marriage Records changes with age. Recent records stay close to the county clerk and the state vital records office, while older records may move into the public archive stream. Tennessee treats marriage records as confidential for 50 years, so the age of the record shapes the request you make. That is why the date is so important in Trousdale County record work.

The CTAS marriage records guide explains the clerk duties behind Tennessee marriage records, including the state filing rule and the marriage book requirement. It helps you understand why the county clerk and the state both have a role. The Tennessee Office of Open Records Counsel also gives public records guidance that helps when you are trying to determine the right custodian for an older record.

If you need a record for use overseas, the state apostille page at tn.gov/topic/business-apostille-exemplified-copy explains how to authenticate a certified Tennessee record after you get it. That step comes after the record search, not before it, so it is only useful once you already have the right copy in hand.

The broader Tennessee state government portal is also a useful starting point when you need a stable state link for marriage records work or related agency pages.

Hartsville Marriage Records

Hartsville is the county seat, so it is the main place to start for Trousdale County Marriage Records. The county clerk office there handles licenses, returned records, and certified copy requests. If you are local to Trousdale County, Hartsville is the easiest anchor point for a marriage search because it is where the official county work happens. The courthouse address is also the best place to keep in mind if you are trying to match a family note to an actual record.

Local history work also benefits from keeping Hartsville in the search. If a family paper or a church note says the marriage happened in Hartsville, that is enough to point you toward the county clerk. The city itself does not change the office you need, but it helps narrow the search and cut down on dead ends.

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Cities in Trousdale County

Hartsville is the county seat and the main place tied to Trousdale County Marriage Records. The county clerk office is there, the courthouse is there, and the record trail begins there. Because this build does not include a separate Hartsville city page, Hartsville stays the key city name to use when you search or request copies in Trousdale County.

If you are searching from another community in Trousdale County, you still end up at the county clerk in Hartsville. That keeps the search local and simple. The county seat is the point where marriage licenses are issued and where the returned records are kept, so Hartsville remains the practical center for the county's marriage-record work.

Nearby Counties

Trousdale County sits in North Central Tennessee, so nearby county lines can matter. If a marriage was filed across the line or if a family lived near a border, another county may have the better clue. Start with Trousdale County, then check nearby county pages if your first search does not hit.

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