The charivari custom has been common in our area but is seldom practiced today. Good reasons for celebrating a wedding with a charivari would be widower in his fifties taking a teenage bride or two elderly people who would elope and not go through formal wedding ceremonies. When situations such as these occurred, neighbors would say “it is time for a charivari” and the newly “married” would be serenaded by bells ringing, spoons clanged, car horns blasted, shotguns blasted, or any way possible to create a loud noise. The ceremony, as I remember it, generally lasted all night long and was followed by an all day feast of eating, drinking and celebration
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