Frank Kameny (holding "Gay is Good" sign) and Paul Kuntzler (to Frank's right) marching with Gay Liberation in New York City's first organized march.
Frank Kameny with picket signs from the Smithsonian exhibit.
Signage from GLAA's protest against Iranian persecution of LGBT people. Photo by Rick Rosendall.
Poster for "We Are Family - Unity Weekend."
GLAA members, Michael Singerman, Frank Kameny, Barrett Brick, RicK Rosendall, and Craig Howell, marching at Capital Pride 1990s.
Representatives of Gay Activists Alliance and International Gay Association present Professor Ruediger Lautmann's manuscript on Nazi persecution of homosexuals to Monroe H. Freedman, Director of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council, on May 18,…
Former GAA President, Mel Boozer.
GAA Metro (DC) ad, "Someone In Your Life Is Gay," 1978-1979. The phone number on the ad, (202) 667-5139, is still good.
Flyer from GAA campaign against police entrapment and harassment in the 1970s.
A picture of GAA's warehouse office and Gay Community Center on 13th and M Streets, NW, Washington, DC.
Kameny for Congress campaign poster, Feb-March 1971.
From the cover of a 1980 issue of the Washingtonian. Photo courtesy Paul Kuntzler
A yellowed-white circular button with bold red text that reads “GAY IS GOOD” with the two Os featuring arrows pointing out diagonally inward and upward from the top of the letters. There is smaller text on the bottom that reads “DRUM.” "Gay is…
April 17, 1965: The first gay-rights picket assembles in front of the White House because gays were then still prohibited from federal employment. Activist Jack Nichols, Front. Frank Kameny is marching just behind Jack. (photo courtesy…