The first marriage licenses to same-sex couples in Louisiana were issued on Monday after state officials held off for several days on implementing a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that legalized gay marriage nationwide.

Two women were granted a marriage license in Jefferson Parish near New Orleans, according to the receptionist at the local court clerk.

The state’s Republican attorney general, Buddy Caldwell, issued a statement after the high court ruling Friday saying that his office had “found nothing in today’s decision that makes the court’s order effective immediately.”

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The Louisiana Clerks of Court Association advised clerks not to issue licenses for 25 days, the period in which the Supreme Court could be petitioned for a rehearing, according to local reports.

Louisiana was the only state that had not issued a marriage license to a same-sex couple as of Friday, according to the Human Rights Campaign, an advocacy group.

A handful of couples were married in Mississippi before the state attorney general put same-sex marriages on hold in the state until a lower court lifted a stay.

It was not clear whether clerks in other parts of Louisiana had begun issuing marriage licenses to gay couples.

(Reporting by Letitia Stein in Tampa, Fla.; Editing by Doina Chiacu)