An Idaho veterans cemetery is refusing to bury the ashes of a lesbian couple together because the state does not recognize same-sex marriages, KBOI reported on Wednesday.
Madelynn Taylor served in the U.S. Navy from 1958 to 1964. She was discharged along with several other women in her unit after another recruit told superiors that they were gay. But Taylor later petitioned to have her discharge documents read “honorable.”
When Taylor — now, 74 years old, and in failing health — presented those documents along with a certificate of marriage to her late wife, Jean Mixner, the Idaho Veterans Cemetery refused to reserve a joint-spot for the two women’s ashes, something the cemetery allows heterosexual couples to do. That’s because the Idaho Constitution defines marriage as an institution between one man and one woman, and as such, does not consider Taylor and Mixner’s 2008 union valid. (The two legally wed in California before voters enacted Proposition 8, that state’s ban on same-sex nuptials.)
“We have to follow the law,” said Tamara Mackenthun, deputy administrator at the Idaho Division of Veterans Services, to KTVB-TV. “We have to follow the Idaho definition of spouse.”
Taylor disagrees with that logic.
“I don’t see where the ashes of a couple old lesbians is going to hurt anyone,” she told KBOI.









