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Gay couples marry in Minn., prepare to do so in RI

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  • ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Al Giraud, right, wipes a tear from his eye as his partner Jeff Isaacson, left. reads his wedding vows as Mayor R.T. Rybak officiates their ceremony at the Minneapolis Freedom to Marry Celebration and Weddings at Minneapolis City Hall, Thursday, Aug. 1, 2013. They were the first gay couple legally married in Minnesota. (AP Photo/Stacy Bengs)
  • ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Holli Petrich and Amy Petrich walk down the isle at the Chapel of Love at the Mall of America in Bloomington, Min., Wednesday, July 31, 2013.(AP Photo/Star Tribune, Kyndell Harkness)
  • ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Margaret Miles, right, celebrates with wife Cathy ten Broeke, left, after they were married at the Minneapolis Freedom to Marry Celebration, Thursday, Aug. 1, 2013 at the Minneapolis City Hall. The couple were the first women legally married in Minnesota. (AP Photo/Stacy Bengs)
  • ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Brook Mattila, left and Heidi Engstad both of Duluth Minn. talk with John Goldfine about the wedding ceremony that is going to take place at Tycoons in Duluth at 12:01 a.m. Thursday Aug. 1, 2013. The two have dated for over two years and are going to be among the first same-sex couples married by a legal ceremony in the state of Minnesota. (AP Photo/News-Tribune, Clint Austin)

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Gay couples began tying the knot at Minneapolis City Hall early Thursday and preparing to do so once town clerks’ offices opened in Rhode Island, as the two states became the latest to allow same-sex marriage.

The Minnesota law allowed weddings to begin just after midnight Wednesday, and 42 couples were to be married by Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak and several Hennepin County judges in the hours before dawn.

"I didn’t expect to cry quite that hard," said a beaming Cathy ten Broeke, who with Margaret Miles was the first gay couple to be wed at City Hall.

The attending crowd burst into applause as Rybak pronounced Miles and ten Broeke married. The couple stood nearby embracing their 5-year-old son, Louie.

"We do," all three said to more cheers as they promised to be a family.

Meanwhile, town clerks were to begin issuing Rhode Island’s first marriage licenses to same-sex couples later Thursday morning. While states such as Massachusetts and California saw long lines and scores of weddings on the day gay marriages began, Rhode Island officials were predicting a relatively calm day, as their state was the last in New England to legalize same-sex marriage.

Rhode Island and Minnesota became the 12th and 13th states to allow gay marriage, along with Washington, D.C. The national gay rights group Freedom to Marry estimates that about 30 percent of the U.S. population now lives in places where gay marriage is legal.

In Minnesota, budget officials estimated that about 5,000 gay couples would marry in the first year. Its enactment capped a fast turnabout on the issue in just over two years. After voters rejected a constitutional ban on gay marriage last fall, the state Legislature this spring moved to make it legal.

"I don’t think either of us ever thought we’d see this day," said Mike Bolin, of the Minneapolis suburb of Richfield, who was marrying Jay Resch, his partner of six years, at Minneapolis City Hall.

Rhode Island became the latest Northeast state to allow same-sex marriage. Lawmakers in the heavily Catholic state passed the marriage law this spring, after more than 16 years of efforts by same-sex marriage supporters. Both Minnesota and Rhode Island will automatically recognize marriages performed in other states.

Bolin and Resch celebrated Wednesday night with several hundred others at Wilde Roast Cafe along the Mississippi River north of downtown Minneapolis. Many at the event planned to walk to City Hall for the mass nuptials.

Dayton proclaimed Aug. 1 to be "Freedom to Marry Day" in Minnesota.

Golden Valley-based General Mills Inc. donated Betty Crocker cakes for the event, which was also to feature performances by local musicians and services donated by wedding photographers, florists and other businesses.

Weddings were not limited to the Twin Cities. In St. Cloud, Stearns County court administrator Tim Roberts planned to marry a couple at 12:01 a.m. at the courthouse. "It feels historic. It’s an honor to be a part of it," Roberts said. Midnight weddings were also planned for courthouses in Clay County, Polk County and elsewhere.

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Associated Press writers Jeff Baenen in Minneapolis and David Klepper in Providence, Rhode Island, contributed to this report.

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