Emelia Preston Dillon and Harry Stone Fishbein were married June 15 at Ohana Family Camp in Post Mills, Vt. Jonathan E. Bos, a Universal Life minister who is a cousin of the bride, led a ceremony incorporating Jewish traditions.
Ms. Dillon, 29, who goes by Emma, is a senior strategist at Mission Control, a Democratic political consulting firm in Washington. She graduated magna cum laude from Tufts.
She is the daughter of Julia D. Preston and Sam Dillon, both of Hoboken, N.J. The bride’s father is an immigration lawyer practicing in Jersey City. Her mother is a journalist and contributing writer covering immigration at the Marshall Project in Manhattan, a nonprofit news organization covering issues concerning the United States criminal justice system. Her parents were also members of the New York Times staff — her mother until 2016 and her father until 2011. From 1995 to 2001 they were correspondents in Mexico, and part of the team that won the 1998 Pulitzer Prize for international reporting for a series on drug corruption in Mexico. They are the authors of “Opening Mexico: The Making of a Democracy” (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2004).
Mr. Fishbein, also 29, is the construction quality control manager on the Frederick Douglass Memorial Bridge Project in Washington. He graduated from Lafayette College.
He is a son of Gail F. Stone and Matthew E. Fishbein of Brooklyn. The groom’s mother, a lawyer, is the director of business administration and corporate counsel in the Brooklyn office of the Bay and Paul Foundations, a grant-making institution focusing on education, sustainability and social justice. She is on the board of the Classic Stage Company in Manhattan. His father is the executive assistant district attorney for the investigations division of the Brooklyn district attorney’s office. He retired as a partner in Debevoise & Plimpton in Manhattan. He is on the board of the Brooklyn Historical Society.
The couple began dating in 2005 when they were sophomores at the Packer Collegiate Institute in Brooklyn.