Dickens mentions 'broomstick marriage' in Great Expectations.
The Welsh also had a centuries-old custom called
priodas coes ysgub, or "broom-stick wedding"
In some areas of Wales, a couple could be married by placing a birch broom at an angle across the doorway. The groom jumped over it first, followed by his bride. If neither of them knocked it out of place, the wedding was a go. If the broom fell down, it was considered that the marriage was doomed to failure, and the whole thing was called off. If the couple decided they were unhappy within the first year of marriage, they could divorce by jumping back out the door, over the broom. More information on this can be found in T. Gwynn Jones' 1930 publication, Welsh Folklore.
The custom was certainly widely-known in England by the late 18th century. The earliest reference given to the phrase in the Oxford English Dictionary is a quote from the Westminster Magazine of 1774: "
He had no inclination for a Broomstick-marriage".
A satirical song published in The Times of 1789 also alludes to the custom in a line referring to the rumoured clandestine marriage between the Prince Regent and Mrs. Fitzherbert: “
Their way to consummation was by hopping o’er a broom, sir"I doubt that many people would give a fig for Lord Hardwickes Act in 1753
