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Regular-article-logo Sunday, 12 May 2024

Matthew Shepard, the LGBTQ movement’s symbol, is being laid to rest

Matthew Shepard was murdered by two roofing workers in 1998 because he was gay

AP Washington Published 26.10.18, 08:03 AM
This 1989 file photo provided by the Matthew Shepard Foundation shows Matthew Shepard in San Francisco.

This 1989 file photo provided by the Matthew Shepard Foundation shows Matthew Shepard in San Francisco. Dennis Shepard/The Matthew Shepard Foundation via AP

The ashes of Matthew Shepard, whose brutal murder in the 1990s became a rallying cry for the gay rights movement, will be laid to rest in the Washington National Cathedral.

Shepard’s remains have for 20 years been kept by his family in Wyoming, where the 21-year-old college student was killed in 1998. His ashes will be interred at the cathedral on Friday morning.

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Judy and Phillip Shepard, parents of the late Matthew Shepard, at a dedication of the Matthew Shepard Memorial Bench in the University of Wyoming on September 27, 2008.

Judy and Phillip Shepard, parents of the late Matthew Shepard, at a dedication of the Matthew Shepard Memorial Bench in the University of Wyoming on September 27, 2008. AP

Shepard’s murder at the hands of two roofing workers who, authorities said, targeted him because he was gay, grabbed national headlines. The gruesome nature of the crime threw a spotlight on the hatred, violence and discrimination endured by LGBTQ individuals and communities in towns and cities across America.

Also this week, personal items including fair ribbons, notebooks and homework assignments, were donated to the Smithsonian Museum.

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