Difference between revisions of "Southern United States LGBTQ History Timeline"
Line 37: | Line 37: | ||
=Notes= | =Notes= | ||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[Category:Louisiana]] | ||
__NOTOC__ | __NOTOC__ |
Revision as of 13:00, 5 February 2012
A chronology of LGBTQ History in the Southern U. S.
Help OutHistory Create This List!
Earliest to latest. Please include the fullest citations available.
Timeline
1836, June 16
Peter Sewally, an African American, tried in New York City for picking men's pockets while dressed as a woman, was asked "What induced you to dress yourself in Women's Clothes?" He answered:
- I have been in the practice of waiting upon Girls of ill fame and made up their Beds and received the Company at the door and received the money for Rooms &c and they induced me to dress in Women's Clothes, saying I looked so much better in them and I have always attended parties among the people of my own Colour dressed in this way -- and in New Orleans I always dressed in this way -- . See: Peter Sewally - Mary Jones, June 11, 1836
1848, February 25-May 25
Walt Whitman visits New Orleans, Louisiana, for three months.
Whitman scholar Maverick Marvin Harris remarks on "the dramatic change in Whitman after the New Orleans trip, his sexual awakening, and the inspiration for the first edition of Leaves of Grass (1855).[1]
In 1867 Whitman published "Once I Pass'd through a Populous City," in which he said, "Yet now of all that city I remember only a woman I casually met there who detain'd me for love of me . . . who passionately clung to me." However, Whitman's earlier manuscript read "the man" instead of "a woman".
In 1867 Whitman published "I Saw in Louisiana a Live-Oak Growing" with the lines: "I wonder'd how it could utter joyous leaves, standing alone there, without its friend, its lover near—for I knew I could not".[2]
In 1871-72, Whitman published a poem with the opening lines: "O Magnet-South! O glistening, perfumed South! My South! / O quick mettle, rich blood, impulse and love! good and evil! O all dear to me!" (in "Longings for Home" [later "O Magnet-South"]).[3]
On August 19, 1890, Whitman responded to John Addington Symonds' queries about the American's man-love poems, saying: "My life, young manhood, mid-age, times South, &c: have been jolly bodily, and doubtless open to criticism". Though he had never married, Whitman then went on to claim having fathered six (!) children (for which there is no documented evidence despite years of research dedicated to finding some evidence them).[4]
1901
Hartland, Claude (pseudonymn). The Story of a Life: For the Consideration of the Medical Fraternity.
- St. Louis, Missouri.
2001, July
Howard, John. Men Like That: A Southern Queer History. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, July 2001. ISBN-10: 0226354709. ISBN-13: 978-0226354705
year, month, day
Text.[5]
Notes
- ↑ Accessed February 5, 2012 from The Walt Whitman Archive.
- ↑ Accessed February 5, 2012, from The Walt Whitman Archive.
- ↑ Accessed February 5, 2012 from The Walt Whitman Archive
- ↑ Jonathan Ned Katz, Love Stories: Sex Between Men Before Homosexuality (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2001), page 282.
- ↑ Citation.