Legal Cases Appealed: January 1, 1800-December 31, 1899

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OutHistory.org Legal Research Project

This website has enlisted a group of Harvard law librarians in a project to copy and place on OutHistory.org the old published reports and the original records in about 150 cases dating from 1810 to 1899 that include the terms “buggery,” “crime against nature,” or “sodomy.”


The Project was conceived by Jonathan Ned Katz, the Co-Director of OutHistory.org, who approached William B Rubenstein, Professor of Law, Harvard Law School, for assistance. Rubenstein enlisted several Harvard law librarians in this ambitious reclamation project.


Katz believes that "the original legal records in these cases will certainly reveal fascinating new details about U.S. social life and legal history in the 19th Century.”


An example is the published report, brief and abbreviated, of an 1897 Texas case. It involved a libel charge against the pro-African American publishers of a statement that Irish conductors employed by a Galveston street car company, who discriminated against “colored ladies,” were “the descendants of Oscar Wilde [meaning that they commit the crime of sodomy]” – the bracketed explanation is in the published report. The libel was affirmed by the appeals court. The brief published account is reproduced on OutHistory.org at W. L. Jones v. The State (Texas): November 24, 1897.


“That case touched tellingly on race, class, sexuality, and gender as indicated in the brief published report," says Katz, “and the original legal records, and any newspaper accounts and other documents about it will, I’m convinced, provide additional intriguing details about what was going on.”


One startling document referring to this case has already been discovered and is reprinted on OutHistory.org at: William Cowper Brann: "The Complete Works", 1898. It contains


The Coordinator of OutHistory.org, Lauren Gutterman, adds: “We at OutHistory.org are asking LGBTQ community members and their friends nation-wide to help retrieve the lost documents that reveal the hidden LGBTQ past. The non-profit, educational OutHistory.org is appealing for volunteers to help with this research,” she added, “it’s a new, web-based form of participatory history making.”


The Legal History Project involves, first, online research to find and copy the old published reports of these cases. The original publications are in the public domain. An example is: W. L. Jones v. The State (Texas): November 24, 1897


Second, the Project involves research in the archives of 25 states or territories, including: Alabama, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, and Washington, and in the archives of the U.S. Supreme Court.


Researchers will need to contact discover which archive holds each state's or territory's legal case appeals records, ask the cost of a copy, send payment, receive the copy, and upload it to OutHistory.org. In some cases, handwritten early legal records will need to be transcribed. OutHistory.org will reimburse researchers for the cost of copies if they submit the original bills.


Third, the Project involves research in old newspapers and secondary sources to see if any relevant additional information about the cases or the accuser, accused, prosecutor, attorneys, or judges can be found.


A chronological, annotated timeline of the 105 cases that mention "buggery," "crime against nature," or "sodomy" appear with the case citations on OutHistory.org at:


Timeline: Published U.S. State Appeals Case Reports, 1800-1899

"The original legal records in at least some of these 19th century cases do exist," says Katz, as indicated by his earlier success in locating these document in two cases, the earliest, in Maryland in 1810 (Davis v. State), and the case in Texas, in 1867 (State v. Campbell). Katz found those original court records in the Texas State Archives, Austin, and the Maryland State Archives, Annapolis. The original records will be added to OutHistory.org.


Katz stresses that the recovery of this group of records will provide important new insights into LGBTQ and heterosexual history.


OutHistory.org, the website on lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender history, is a project of the Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies, at the City University of New York Graduate Center, which is seeking donations online or by mail to support this project and the site’s operation, expansion, and improvement in 2011.

Contact for this project: Jonathan Ned Katz, jkatz@gc.cuny.edu

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