In the Southeast, where legal same-sex marriage remains a distant hope for many, some are challenging the law of the land in a very direct way: gay couples are requesting marriage licenses knowing they’ll face rejection under state law.
Through the “We Do” campaign, organized and executed by the gay rights group Campaign for Southern Equality, roughly 50 couples have sought marriage licenses in South Carolina, North Carolina, Mississippi, Georgia, Tennessee–all states with constitutional bans on same-sex marriage.
“LGBT folks are expressing their full equality and full humanity in public life,” says Rev. Jasmine Beach-Ferrara, Campaign for Southern Equality Executive Director, of the marriage license requests. “[Being LGBT and in the south] we’re trained to do almost everything in our power to avoid situations like that.”
On Thursday, “We Do” plans to wrap up its current leg with couples applying for marriage licenses in Arlington, Virginia. Same-sex marriage is not recognized in Virginia, and Beach-Ferrara expects the couples to be denied. The group will then march to Washington, and end at the Jefferson Memorial where a couple from Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Mark Maxwell and Tim Young, will legally marry.
While now for the first time in the country’s history, a majority of Americans support same-sex marriage, and last year President Obama became the first sitting president to publicly express his support for same-sex marriage, the South still lags behind. A Pew Research poll conducted in Dec. 2012 shows 56% in Southern states oppose same-sex marriage and overall attitudes toward gay marriage in the south are a decade behind.
In May 2012, North Carolina famously dealt a blow to marriage equality efforts when the state voted in favor of Amendment 1, which altered the state constitution to define marriage as between a man and a woman. The state’s Democratic Gov. Bev Perdue has stated her belief the ban is bad for the state.
Similarly, no Southern state allows gay marriage and all have constitutions banning it.
This fact isn’t lost on Beach-Ferrara who acknowledges it will take “real action on a federal level” to change things in the South. But there’s power when a same-sex couple in the South asks for a marriage license, she adds, because it shows “what happens when these laws are enforced.”
“WE DO” TAKES ACTION
The campaign’s roots started in the mid-2000s, when Beach-Ferrara, a minister in the United Church of Christ, began doing what she calls “old-school grassroots organizing” via family dinners with her wife Meghann Burke in the area around their Asheville, North Carolina home. This organizing helped lead to the eventual formation of the CSE and the “We Do” campaign.
“What we understood was there’s an extraordinary readiness among LGBT folks to stand up for full equality,” Beach-Ferrara says of the campaign.
After roughly ten months of planning, “We Do” launched at noon on October 3, 2011 when Kathryn Cartledge and Elizabeth Eve, a couple both in their 60s, requested a marriage license at the Buncombe County Register of Deeds in Asheville. Beach-Ferrara refers to these requests as “actions.” When a “We Do” action takes place, the CSE alerts the public office in advance of what they are planning.
Beach-Ferrara says “We Do” does this so as not to shock to the public office.
“We want people to prepare how they’ll feel about this,” she says.
Cartledge and Eve were ultimately arrested for civil disobedience after sitting on the floor of the register of deeds office, requesting they receive a license. They were fined and released soon after.
The CSE also has Brooklyn-based filmmaker Ryan Murdock on hand to film couples requesting marriage licenses. Murdock says he feels each couple is “incredibly brave” for demanding marriage equality.
And while the couples know they’ll leave without a marriage license, the impact of being denied is “powerful,” says Eve, who has been with Cartledge for 30 years.
“We went in and had all of our paperwork,” she continues. “We knew exactly what we were going to say, and we knew we would be denied. “Every other couple I have witnessed and spoken to has been absolutely astonished at the powerful emotions that arrive when you stand at that counter and you present your paperwork and you are denied. To be told that as a citizen of our country, no you don’t have this right. It’s heartbreaking. And I was completely surprised that I would feel that way about it. Just really surprised that this feeling rises up and you’re reduced to tears.”
Couples that agree to take part in “We Do” are required to complete training to ensure they’re made aware of the potential impacts on their jobs and personal lives.









