Difference between revisions of "Henry Gerber: "I wanted to help solve the problem," 1920-1925"

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In 1953, twenty-nine years after the founding, in Chicago, of the Society of Human Rights, the earliest-known homosexual rights organization in the U.S., a short, anonymous letter from its founder, Henry Gerber, published in ''ONE'', the then new homosexual emancipation monthly magzine, briefly described the fate of that early organization.<ref>note 93</ref>
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In 1953, twenty-nine years after the founding, in Chicago, of the [[Chicago Society for Human Rights: December 10, 1924|Society of Human Rights]], the earliest-known homosexual rights organization in the U.S., a short, anonymous letter from its founder, Henry Gerber, published in ''ONE'', the then new homosexual emancipation monthly magzine, briefly described the fate of that early organization.<ref>note 93</ref>
  
  

Revision as of 17:45, 10 October 2008

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In 1953, twenty-nine years after the founding, in Chicago, of the Society of Human Rights, the earliest-known homosexual rights organization in the U.S., a short, anonymous letter from its founder, Henry Gerber, published in ONE, the then new homosexual emancipation monthly magzine, briefly described the fate of that early organization.[1]


In 1962, ONE magazine published a detailed account of the Chicago Society for Human Rights, written by Henry Gerber, this time under his own name.[2]


[Add text from GAH, pp. 388, starting with "Just 37 yeas ago, in 1925," ..... up to "the Society for Human Rights" on page 293]

  1. note 93
  2. Henry Gerber, "The Society for Human Rights--1925," ONE Magazine (Los Angeles), vol. 10, no. 9 (Sept. 1962, pp. 5-10.