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Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer History by the LGBTQ Community

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New on OutHistory.org

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OutHistory.org Fundraiser April 7th, 2011

Kate Clinton and Urvashi Vaid invite you for wine and hors d'oeuvres to support OutHistory.org.


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Rob Frydlewicz: Paying Tribute to John Waters' Drag Diva Divine, 1945–1988

History Through My Pink-Colored Glasses

OutHistory initiates a new blog, the personal take of Rob Frydlewicz on people and events in the past as seen through one man's rose-hued lenses.

Who is Rob Frydlewicz? See: Rob Frydlewicz: History Through My Pink-Colored Glasses: Main Page


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Since Stonewall Local Histories Contest

View the winners and all the entries in the contest sponsored by OutHistory.org to research and write the local history of your village, town, city, county, or state since Stonewall in 1969.


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Today's History: The OutHistory Blog

Happy Birthday Audre Lorde! Audre Lorde would have been 77 this week, and hers is a voice that we would so benefit from hearing these days. .... Link to the OutHistory Blog for reflections.


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Support OutHistory.org Donate On Line or By Mail

Help OutHistory.org keep making history. Every penny counts! From 2011 on, OutHistory.org will depend completely on donations from individuals like yourself, who understand that preserving the LGBT past is a form of activism -- and a valuable public service.


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Exhibits

Explore a thorough listing of historical exhibits on OutHistory.org.


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Participate: Help OutHistory.org Make History

OutHistory.org is unique in providing a freely accessible, non-profit forum for LGBTQ community members and their friends, including independent and academy-based scholars, to write and publish the history of the LGBT community. The focus for now is on the U.S. and its international relations.


OutHistory.org includes articles marked “Open Entry”. These are collaboratively and anonymously created by logged-on users with evidence, citations, and analysis to share. Here’s how to create an “Open Entry”


OutHistory.org also includes articles marked “Protected Entry”. These are by named, logged-on creators and can be edited only by that creator or site administrators. So the named author is responsible for the entry’s accuracy, clarity, and source citations. Upon request, the Coordinator of OutHistory.org will protect an entry by a named author from changes. Here’s how to create a Protected Entry


For more about how to participate in OutHistory.org see Participate

Social Networking on OutHistory.org

REVIEW a Work on LGBTQ History

About OutHistory.org

OutHistory.org is a freely accessible, community created, non-profit website on lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and, yes, heterosexual history produced by the Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies at the City University of New York Graduate Center, directed by Sarah Chinn. In its first four years it was supported by a generous grant from the Arcus Foundation (ending December 31, 2010), and contributions from individuals. OutHistory was awarded the 2010 Allan Berube Prize in Public History by the Committee on LGBT History of the American Historical Association.

OutHistory.org Staff

Coordinator: Lauren Gutterman: outhistory@gc.cuny.edu

Founder, Co-Director: Jonathan Ned Katz, Independent Scholar and Author: (jnk134@mac.com)

Co-Director: Daniel Hurewitz, Assistant Professor, Hunter College, NYC: daniel.hurewitz@hunter.cuny.edu

Co-Director: Karen Miller, Associate Professor of Urban Studies and History, LaGuardia Community College: kamiller@lagcc.cuny.edu

For more about OutHistory see About.

OutHistory.org: FIGHT AGAINST FORGETTING!

In a story headed “Schomburg Center in Harlem Acquires Maya Angelou Archive”, the New York Times reports:

Ms. Angelou said that transparency about her life and work connected her to a long African-American tradition of preserving and retelling personal history.


“Hold those things that tell your history and protect them,” she said. “During slavery, who was able to read or write or keep anything? The ability to have somebody to tell your story to is so important. It says: ‘I was here. I may be sold tomorrow. But you know I was here.’ ”(Felicia R. Lee, “Schomburg Center in Harlem Acquires Maya Angelou Archive,” October 26, 2010. Accessed October 27, 2010.)


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