Difference between revisions of "Gay Liberation in New York City"
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December 1969: Marty Robinson, Jim Owles, and ten others leave GLF to form the Gay Activists Alliance (GAA) | December 1969: Marty Robinson, Jim Owles, and ten others leave GLF to form the Gay Activists Alliance (GAA) | ||
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May 1, 1970: After the National Organization for Women (NOW) president Betty Friedan calls lesbians in the women’s movement a “lavender menace,” a group of women take over the Second Congress to Unite Women, passing out their “Woman-Identified Woman” statement and initiating a conversation about lesbianism among conference participants. Radicalesbians (RL) is formed out of this action. | May 1, 1970: After the National Organization for Women (NOW) president Betty Friedan calls lesbians in the women’s movement a “lavender menace,” a group of women take over the Second Congress to Unite Women, passing out their “Woman-Identified Woman” statement and initiating a conversation about lesbianism among conference participants. Radicalesbians (RL) is formed out of this action. | ||
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June 28, 1970: The First Annual Christopher Street Liberation Day Parade is held. | June 28, 1970: The First Annual Christopher Street Liberation Day Parade is held. | ||
− | Summer 1970: Members of the Gay Liberation Front | + | Summer 1970: Members of the Gay Liberation Front form the Third World Gay Revolution (TWGR). GLFers Steven Dansky, John Knoebel, and Kenneth Pitchford organize [[The Flaming Faggots]] collective. |
September 1970: Gay liberationists hold a five-day sit-in at NYU’s Weinstein Hall to protest the cancellation of gay dances there. Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries (STAR) is formed out of this protest. | September 1970: Gay liberationists hold a five-day sit-in at NYU’s Weinstein Hall to protest the cancellation of gay dances there. Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries (STAR) is formed out of this protest. | ||
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January 1971: City Council Members Eldon Clingan and Carter Burden introduce a bill—Intro 475—to include sexual orientation in New York’s Human Rights Law. | January 1971: City Council Members Eldon Clingan and Carter Burden introduce a bill—Intro 475—to include sexual orientation in New York’s Human Rights Law. | ||
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On June 27th, 1969, seven officers from the Public Morals Section of the New York City Police Department raided the Stonewall Inn, a popular gay bar in New York City’s Greenwich Village. The raid sparked a three-day rebellion against the police—the largest and most sustained uprising among gays, lesbians, and transgender individuals to that point. And although it did not mark the beginning of New York’s LGBT movement—members of the Mattachine Society of New York (MSNY) and the Daughters of Bilitis (DOB) had been fighting for civil rights for years when Stonewall took place—it did initiate a new wave of activism, one that differed markedly from the homophile movements that preceded it. | On June 27th, 1969, seven officers from the Public Morals Section of the New York City Police Department raided the Stonewall Inn, a popular gay bar in New York City’s Greenwich Village. The raid sparked a three-day rebellion against the police—the largest and most sustained uprising among gays, lesbians, and transgender individuals to that point. And although it did not mark the beginning of New York’s LGBT movement—members of the Mattachine Society of New York (MSNY) and the Daughters of Bilitis (DOB) had been fighting for civil rights for years when Stonewall took place—it did initiate a new wave of activism, one that differed markedly from the homophile movements that preceded it. | ||
− | In the years following Stonewall, LGBT individuals organized on unprecedented levels, forging new forms of activism that would change the direction of the movement and the consciousness of a generation. New York City was central to this period of activism, giving birth not only to the first gay liberation group in the country—the Gay Liberation Front (GLF), organized a mere month after Stonewall—but also to the myriad groups and organizations to follow, such as the Gay Activists Alliance (GAA), Radicalesbians (RL), Third World Gay Revolution (TWGR), Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries (STAR | + | In the years following Stonewall, LGBT individuals organized on unprecedented levels, forging new forms of activism that would change the direction of the movement and the consciousness of a generation. New York City was central to this period of activism, giving birth not only to the first gay liberation group in the country—the Gay Liberation Front (GLF), organized a mere month after Stonewall—but also to the myriad groups and organizations to follow, such as the Gay Activists Alliance (GAA), Radicalesbians (RL), Third World Gay Revolution (TWGR), Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries (STAR), and many more. |
− | This exhibit will focus on the strain of activism that dominated the gay political scene in New York City and across the country | + | This exhibit will focus on the strain of activism that dominated the gay political scene in New York City and across the country in the late 1960s and early 1970s: Gay Liberation. The movement that emerged out of Stonewall was unique in the emphasis it placed on empowering gays, lesbians, and transgender individuals to come out, be proud, and fight back against oppression. But the movement never coalesced around a dominant political philosophy or organizational strategy, and fierce debates—both within and among different groups—persisted throughout the 1970s. Additionally, activists splintered along race, class, and gender lines, with women, people of color, and transgender people breaking off from the predominant groups to organize around their own identities and struggle against their particular oppressions. |
By examining this early period of activism in New York City in all of its complexity, we hope to shed light on a critical juncture in the LGBT movement—both its successes and shortcomings—and, in doing so, to glimpse at what may yet be possible. | By examining this early period of activism in New York City in all of its complexity, we hope to shed light on a critical juncture in the LGBT movement—both its successes and shortcomings—and, in doing so, to glimpse at what may yet be possible. | ||
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Revision as of 20:38, 27 February 2010
Timeline:
June 27-29, 1969: Gays, lesbians, and transgender individuals fight back against the police after a raid on the gay bar the Stonewall Inn.
July 1969: The Gay Liberation Front (GLF) is organized in response to Stonewall
December 1969: Marty Robinson, Jim Owles, and ten others leave GLF to form the Gay Activists Alliance (GAA)
May 1, 1970: After the National Organization for Women (NOW) president Betty Friedan calls lesbians in the women’s movement a “lavender menace,” a group of women take over the Second Congress to Unite Women, passing out their “Woman-Identified Woman” statement and initiating a conversation about lesbianism among conference participants. Radicalesbians (RL) is formed out of this action.
June 28, 1970: The First Annual Christopher Street Liberation Day Parade is held.
Summer 1970: Members of the Gay Liberation Front form the Third World Gay Revolution (TWGR). GLFers Steven Dansky, John Knoebel, and Kenneth Pitchford organize The Flaming Faggots collective.
September 1970: Gay liberationists hold a five-day sit-in at NYU’s Weinstein Hall to protest the cancellation of gay dances there. Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries (STAR) is formed out of this protest.
January 1971: City Council Members Eldon Clingan and Carter Burden introduce a bill—Intro 475—to include sexual orientation in New York’s Human Rights Law.
October 1971: Three days of public hearings on Intro 475 are held.
January 1972: The City Council’s General Welfare Committee opposes bringing Intro 475 to the full council.
Introduction
On June 27th, 1969, seven officers from the Public Morals Section of the New York City Police Department raided the Stonewall Inn, a popular gay bar in New York City’s Greenwich Village. The raid sparked a three-day rebellion against the police—the largest and most sustained uprising among gays, lesbians, and transgender individuals to that point. And although it did not mark the beginning of New York’s LGBT movement—members of the Mattachine Society of New York (MSNY) and the Daughters of Bilitis (DOB) had been fighting for civil rights for years when Stonewall took place—it did initiate a new wave of activism, one that differed markedly from the homophile movements that preceded it.
In the years following Stonewall, LGBT individuals organized on unprecedented levels, forging new forms of activism that would change the direction of the movement and the consciousness of a generation. New York City was central to this period of activism, giving birth not only to the first gay liberation group in the country—the Gay Liberation Front (GLF), organized a mere month after Stonewall—but also to the myriad groups and organizations to follow, such as the Gay Activists Alliance (GAA), Radicalesbians (RL), Third World Gay Revolution (TWGR), Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries (STAR), and many more.
This exhibit will focus on the strain of activism that dominated the gay political scene in New York City and across the country in the late 1960s and early 1970s: Gay Liberation. The movement that emerged out of Stonewall was unique in the emphasis it placed on empowering gays, lesbians, and transgender individuals to come out, be proud, and fight back against oppression. But the movement never coalesced around a dominant political philosophy or organizational strategy, and fierce debates—both within and among different groups—persisted throughout the 1970s. Additionally, activists splintered along race, class, and gender lines, with women, people of color, and transgender people breaking off from the predominant groups to organize around their own identities and struggle against their particular oppressions.
By examining this early period of activism in New York City in all of its complexity, we hope to shed light on a critical juncture in the LGBT movement—both its successes and shortcomings—and, in doing so, to glimpse at what may yet be possible.
Categories
gay liberation, NYC, Stonewall, Gay Liberation Front, Gay Activist Alliance, Radicalesbians, Third World Gay Revolution, Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries, Queens Liberation Front
Contact
Kody Trauger: kody.trauger@gmail.com or Lindsay Branson: lindsay.branson@gmail.com