Category Archives: Congressional Cemetery

Design competition for LGBT veterans memorial

Congressional Cemetery, gay news, Washington Blade

An organization is planning to install a National LGBT Veterans Memorial in D.C.’s historic Congressional Cemetery. (Washington Blade file photo by Michael Key)

An organization planning to install a National LGBT Veterans Memorial in D.C.’s historic Congressional Cemetery is inviting artists to enter a competition for the design of a monument “to honor LGBT veterans who have served in the U.S. armed forces” that will be part of the memorial.

Nancy Russell, a retired Army Lt. Colonel and chair of the board of the National LGBT Veterans Memorial Project, said the group has a contract with Congressional Cemetery for a site for the monument with the option to obtain more space if needed.

“The time has come for those of us who were forced to serve in silence to honor our fellow veterans with a dignified and impressive memorial in our national capital,” Russell said. “The National LGBT Veterans Memorial will be a fitting testament to those who have served our nation with honor.”

A statement released by the organization says a deadline for submission of designs has been set for Oct. 15, 2013. Information about how to enter the contest and how supporters can make a contribution to help pay for the monument can be obtained at nlgbtvm.org or by emailing an inquiry to Chair@NLGBTVM.org.

“The concept behind this project is to create a memorial garden where military veterans can inter all or part of their remains/ashes amid a community of other proud veterans,” a statement on the group’s website says. “It is to be a place of honor where friends and family members may go to remember and pay homage to their loved one.”

Year in review: Kameny burial delayed indefinitely

Frank Kameny gravesite, gay news, Washington Blade

(Washington Blade file photo by Michael Key)

More than a year after gay rights pioneer Frank Kameny died in his Washington home at the age of 86, an urn bearing his ashes remains in storage at D.C.’s historic Congressional Cemetery.

News of what became an indefinite delay in the burial of Kameny’s ashes at the cemetery surfaced in March, when a cemetery official said a March 3 burial ceremony had been abruptly cancelled due to an estate related dispute.

Patrick Crowley, the then interim senior manager of Congressional Cemetery, said the dispute was between Kameny’s estate, which has legal control over the ashes, and the D.C. gay charitable group Helping Our Brothers and Sisters (HOBS), which owns the burial site.

The estate is under the control of Timothy Clark, the heir and personal representative, or executor, of the estate.

Both sides have acknowledged that the dispute is over a disagreement about how to transfer ownership of the cemetery plot from HOBS, which bought it earlier this year, to the Kameny estate.

HOBS executive director Marvin Carter has said HOBS is willing to sell the plot to the estate at the price the group paid for it. The estate, through one of its attorneys, said HOBS bought the plot through donations from members of the LGBT community who knew and admired Kameny and HOBS should transfer the title to the plot to the estate rather than sell it.

“The estate of Franklin Kameny is currently in negotiations in an effort to settle outstanding matters related to the estate,” said estate attorney Glen Ackerman in a statement in October. “We cannot comment on these negotiations or the status of the various matters as doing so may compromise the progress that has been made thus far. All involved are hopeful that resolution may be reached in the near future.”

In a separate statement Carter said, “HOBS is working diligently and in good faith to resolve all issues concerning the plot at Congressional Cemetery and the final burial of Frank’s ashes at the cemetery in a manner and under circumstances that will protect and advance Frank’s reputation in and contributions to the LGBT community.”