Yes, you can. I have sent this to the list before, and it is a bit complicated, but anyone can access a ton of marriage certificates through FamilySearch. This is a Batch # search and it usually gives you records from the county court clerk's office in most counties of the US. If you are unsure of the source of any record you find on FamilySearch, click on the Source # at the bottom of the record and it will say where the information came from. 1. Go to this site: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~hughwallis/IGIBatchNumbersNA/CountryU SA.htm 2. Click on the state and then the county or sometimes, church, you are interested in. 3. COPY (highlight with cursor, right click mouse and click copy) the number associated with the years you are searching. 4. Open the FamilySearch site: http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/frameset_search.asp and on the left side of the screen, click on International Genealogical Index. 5. On that screen, in the bottom left of the screen under Batch Number, PASTE (put cursor in the space, right click mouse and click paste) the number you copied earlier from the state and counties site. 6. Just above the Batch Number, under Region, choose North America from the drop down menu. 7. Now just fill in the last name you are searching or even the first name or initial only. Try variations of spelling. Hit Search on the lower right side of the screen and you will get a screen of hits for that name on that Batch of records only. It sure cuts down on the hundreds of hits you may get with a common name. I keep both sites bookmarked and use it constantly. Let me know if you have any trouble. I may have missed a step or gotten something wrong in the description. It is a little complicated, but it's one of the best tools I've found on the Internet for free marriage records. Peggy M. T.