U.S. Army holds first wedding without bride and groom
By Laura Zuckerman
SALMON, Idaho (Reuters Life!) - When Sergeant Ryan Thompson married U.S. Army Specialist Barbara Hines on Wednesday there was a wedding cake and a chaplain but two things were missing -- the bride and the groom.
Both Thompson, 25, and Hines, 29, were on duty overseas when they were married on Wednesday in Montana, the only state that allows double-proxy weddings where neither bride nor groom is required to be present.
Thompson, stationed in Iraq, and Hines, in Afghanistan, were married previously and had a son but divorced in 2003. However they stayed in close contact over the years while stationed in separate military bases in the United States and overseas.
"They were very young when they first married and now they feel they have matured a lot and want to give it another shot," said Montana National Guard spokeswoman Stacey Tyson.
"They have talked for years about trying to reconcile their relationship and recently decided to go for it. They researched the idea of getting married by proxy, which led them to Montana."
Just three states allow a form of marriage by proxy but those states require either the bride or groom to be present at the ceremony.
Montana is the only state that allows double-proxy weddings if one of the couple is a Montana resident or a member of the U.S. Armed Forces.
Tyson said this was the first time that the Montana National Guard had performed a double-proxy wedding, even though the state law allowing this dates back to the 19th century. Continued...






