November 22nd, 2009
 

365 Gay: News

Stonewall: Forty years later

, 365gay.com

“That’s exactly the piece of the Stonewall story that’s been an inspiration to me,” said transgender activist and actress Calpernia Addams. “In a time when it was not safe to openly express who they were, these marginalized people – gay men, trans people in various stages of transitioning – all had the courage to fight back. They reached the point that night where they said, no more.”

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Calpernia Adams

Stonewall might have been the LGBT movement’s most famous riot, but it wasn’t the first. Nor was it the last. Ten years later, rioting broke out in San Francisco after former Supervisor Dan White received a near-slap on the wrist for killing the city’s first out gay supervisor, Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone.

“It’s a bizarre set of coincidences that on the thirtieth anniversary of the murders of Harvey Milk and George Moscone, we’d have a film opening about Harvey’s life,” said Jones.

“Then on the thirtieth anniversary of the White Night Riots, law enforcement was apparently concerned the news about the Prop 8 decision would spark a repeat of those riots. And now with progress in multiple states and setbacks in California, it’s all coming to a head on the fortieth anniversary of the Stonewall rebellion that launched the modern gay rights movement.”

Today, the legacy of Stonewall is everywhere. A march held in Greenwich Village to commemorate the riots became the annual Pride events celebrated in cities all over the world today, and “Stonewall” is part of the name of dozens of LGBT political groups.

What’s more, the thousands of gay and lesbian political organizations that emerged in the wake of Stonewall became the driving force behind Harvey Milk’s fight for public office and against anti-gay legislation in California in the 1970s. It inspired ACT-UP and all the angry, politically savvy organizing around HIV/AIDS in the 80s and 90s, and it continues to drive protests and demonstrations for marriage equality, where signs reminding us that “Stonewall was a riot” wave in the air next to those reading “Everyone deserves the right to marry.”

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The legacy is even there in the fear being whipped up in the wake of the passage of Prop 8 by the religious right, the drumbeat that gay people would – or did – riot, destroy property, vandalize churches, and even commit violence against people who supported the measure.

“When I was coming out it was illegal for us to dance together. It was a felony to have sex,” Jones told me. “The idea of full equality wasn’t on anyone’s agenda. There was a long list of inequalities we could read from to underscore how screwed up it was, but the early organizing I was involved in was mostly around creating safe places where gay people could meet and socialize and dance without being in Mafia bars and hauled off to the police. We’ve come a long way since then.”

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  • R & R Said: June 11th, 2009 at 6:09 pm
    • I am old enough to remember when you were warned at the door of a gay bar in Hollywood not to touch anyone because “they are here.” Touch and you could be arrested for soliciting by an LAPD vice officer. The result would most often be arrest, trial, and forced to register as a sex offender. And one wonders why it is so hard for other who have not had that experience not to understand why it is so easy to be furious at the comments which come from the Christian Taliban and those who allow themselves to be influenced by their bigotry and hypocrisy.

  • H. (Bart) Vincelette Said: June 11th, 2009 at 5:52 pm
    • So much is owed to so many who sacrificed , fought , lobbied , and gave their all ( and sometimes their lives), to achieve what we have today. I am so very grateful. And yes , we have a long way to go , but I agree with the support for using one’s anger to push constructiveluy for change. I do not believe we have been given anything by the powers that be, They have simply and finally ; acknowledged what was ours to begin with.

  • Ted Larson Said: June 11th, 2009 at 3:58 pm
    • Judy Garland was found dead in her London apartment June 22, 1969. A National Gay Day of Mourning. I remember hearing the news and thought was very saddening.

  • Ibalin Qlink Said: June 11th, 2009 at 3:50 pm
    • Wasn’t it the night following Judy Garland’s funeral? The death of our first big ‘diva’ coupled with the injustice and someone not in the mood to be hassled. One night. That one night. If the raids had been held off for that weekend, the ‘beginning’ of the gay rights movement would have been delayed, perhaps by decades. It is our Rosa Parks incident. It’s our bus boycott. It wasn’t the first incident of gays demanding rights, but it was the biggest in the media age up to that point.

  • Ted Larson Said: June 11th, 2009 at 2:55 pm
    • I turned 18 in late 1961. I had false ID to show I was 18 just to get into the bars prior. I remember the mayoral elections of 1964. Prior the election night in November, they city government went around on what was called a city wide clean up. They closed gay bar
      after gay bar. We had no place to go except on the streets. The Village streets got real busy those nights. When the elections were finally over, I understand that many straight businesses pleaded to Mayor Lindsey to please allow the gay bars to open again and “get these queens off the street”.

      I stayed in New York until 1966. I had a little apartment in an old brownstone on Hicks Street in Heights. I remember cruisin’ the Promenade, even on those cold winter nights. The week of the Stonewall riots, I was working as a male dancer with a drag show in Atlantic City, at the Fort Pitt on New York Ave. and the Boardwalk One night the bar
      and show people were arrested for having men wearing women’s clothes. After they got us all out of jail, the show went right back on. The drags got real creative and wore mens clothes and the “Show Must Go On!” After that somebody in the AC government heard
      about the Stonewall Riots and didn’t want that in their city, so we were never harassed again.

  • Gerry Fisher Said: June 11th, 2009 at 1:52 pm
    • >…but real change didn’t come until the 1990s.

      Don’t sell the seventies and eighties (my era as a young adult) short. A whole body of literature was born in the late seventies with Holleran, White, Maupin, and more. You might think, “So, what? They’re just books.” But them meant the *world* to me coming out in 1982. Reading a small bookshelf of all those books was practically like “going to school” for understanding and participating in gay male culture.

      One of the odd side effects of the AIDS epidemic was that straights got to see committed and loving gay people caring for their partners. The fighting for AIDS funding, against a Moral Majority backlash, and for state-wide anti-discrimination laws took place in the eighties (MA finally got its anti-discrimination law in 1989). I remember protesting for foster care rights in the eighties in MA. I was also part of an effort to bring LBGT issues into the diversity program of a Fortune 500 company at that time (the now defunct Digital Equipment Corporation).

      Progress didn’t stall between the Stonewall riots and the nineties.

  • John Said: June 11th, 2009 at 1:11 pm
    • If you were an adult, employed, and living outside NY and maybe one or two other places, likely as not you just wished at the time that the “riot” hadn’t happened. It drew attention toward gay or lesbian people in a tightly closeted world; the last thing many of us wanted was more attention. It had begun to change five years later and by the tenth anniversary, the door on the closet had opened wider, but real change didn’t come until the 1990s. Stonewall was a beginning, but it took the country quite a while to catch up.

  • Stephanie Said: June 11th, 2009 at 12:59 pm
    • I really loved this article. I loved it so much that I made a link for it on my blog on Tumblr. I am 17 years old, and in my lgbt community, where I live in Queens, New York, not a lot of people know that this went on at all, and it’s a shame, really. I want to push learning about this in public schools, because the more education there is about it, the more there won’t be any prejudice, because they’ll see that it compares to the Black Civil Rights movement. It also ties into todays politics, with Prop 8, and legalization of gay marriage. So yeah, this should be taught in schools it is a part of our history.

  • Joey In CT Said: June 11th, 2009 at 12:45 pm
    • My comment is along the lines of Debra’s. I’m 24, I wasn’t even a tickle in my Dad’s…well yeah. I think my Mom was like 6…anyway, I wasn’t alive to have witnessed the riot, but do thank and appreciate that it happened. I remember when I first heard about Stonewall and what it was was from my older boyfriend at the time and felt incluned to read up on the subject. How shocking and disgusting it was to read about the plight of our community prior to and during the Stonewall era.

      I wish I’d be at home in CT for NYC pride, but I’ll be in VA then.

      It is time for another riot, or demonstration, or whatever.

      I’ll be in DC on 10/11, in which Cleve Jones has called for a March on Equality in DC on National Coming-out Day. I’ll be there, and so should you. Make our voices heard. We haven’t gone anywhere in 40+ years, and we’re not going anywhere now. Our masses of people only increase every day, as people have less and less fear of who they are and are encouraged and supported to come out, and be true to you and only you.

      We’re Here, We’re Queer, and bet your sweet ass we’ll fight for our rights.

      REMEMBER: OCTOBER 11, 2009; Washington D.C. – March on EQUALITY!

  • equalnotspecial Said: June 11th, 2009 at 12:44 pm
    • Finely, an article about Stonewall that recognizes the struggle for equal rights was already in progress.
      The first public gay rights organization in the U.S. was the Society for Human Rights (SHR) in 1924, organized by Henry Gerber, who was soon arrested. Organization attempts continued and the Mattachine Society emerged in 1950, followed by Daughters of Bilitis organized by Del Martin and Phyllis Lyon (the first couple married in California) in San Francisco in 1955. In August of 1966, the Compton Cafeteria riot in San Francisco, helped set the precedent for Stonewall. By 1969 gay and lesbian organizations existed all over the country. Stonewall was an important milestone because it was the first time the national media paid attention, but it was not the birth of the gay equal rights movement in the U.S. Thanks to all who made it happen, but the hard work and sacrifice of those who preceded Stonewall should not be forgotten either.

  • Debra Said: June 11th, 2009 at 11:25 am
    • I would like to add my thanks to those who were there that night for standing up and acting up. I hope we honor that moment by acting up again….soon.

  • Prof. Donald Gaudard Said: June 11th, 2009 at 11:17 am
    • An excellent article on the Stonewall riots can be found at the Wikipedia site below:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stonewall_riots

      This article should be mandatory reading for all gays and lesbians concerning our history and the role that transsexuals, transvestites, and lesbians played in the beginning of the modern gay rights movement.

  • BRUCE Said: June 11th, 2009 at 9:53 am
    • I am always reminded at this time of year just how important the Drag Queens, Transvestites and X-dressers were to the birth of the Gay Movement.
      These people have been marginalized within our own community…. they still are…. at this time of year, perhaps we should be doing some housekeeping.
      Perhaps the Gay Community should rethink how we treat one another.

  • Sarrellec Said: June 11th, 2009 at 9:33 am
    • Me too.
      I was 12 years old in ‘69. I saw the news reports and it was the beginning of my life-long rant on equal protection under the law.
      I took the train from Bay Shore to the city every chance I could get away to join demonstrations and meetings.
      Just an ugly fat pizza-faced too-big-for-my-age kid that passed, sometimes, for over 18 easily.
      I learned how to negotiate law library stacks and participated in three–count ‘em!!!—three of the demonstrations, one of which was just an umbrella civil rights demo.
      I’ve been angry and fighting ever since.
      Necessity may be the mother of invention, but dis·sen·sion [ di sénshən ] noun

      Definition:

      disagreement: disagreement or difference of opinion, especially when leading to open conflict

      is the Father.

      Without that anger. Without that realization and conviction that something is WRONG and the drive to change or correct that wrongness, there is no feeling of necessity to change.

      So, folks, don’t be afraid of feeling that righteous anger. Just use it.

      Thank all of you wonderful folks that finally had enough that night. We owe you all so much.

  • Larry in Iowa Said: June 11th, 2009 at 8:50 am
    • I remember Stonewall vividly! I was living in the New York suburbs at the time, and the TV coverage from the local channels was extensive. I recall one guy leaning out of the police paddy wagon and yelling “The only reason I’m being arrested is because I am gay.” It was the first time I had heard the term “gay” to mean homosexual. I also remember thinking, there but for the grace of God go I. We’ve come a long way since then, for sure.

 
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