The first meeting of what becomes the Gay Academic Union takes place in New York City when a few faculty, graduate students, and writers meet to discuss how history and other kinds of research could benefit the gay liberation movement. Over the next…
The Las Vegas OutHistory project. This exhibit was a winner of OutHistory's 2010 Since Stonewall community history contest!
As a college student Phil Price publishes out of his parents’ basement the inaugural issue of Out Front, Colorado's first openly gay publication. He adopts the slogan "There's no turning back!" Out Front continues to publish in…
ACT UP (the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power) converges on Wall Street in New York City to stage its first major demonstration. Exposing the ties between the corporate pharmaceutical industry and the Food and Drug Administration, demonstrators blocked…
At a press conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Representative Bella Abzug, along with other members of Congress and gay and lesbian activists, announces that HR 5452 has been introduced in Congress with 24 sponsors. The bill proposed to outlaw…
Barney Frank, Elected Official
Alberta Hunter, Singer and Performer
Jane Rule, Novelist
Margarethe Cammermeyer, Military Officer and Activist
“The Tom-Boy who was changed into a real boy” McGloughlin Bros. 1859. Image Courtesy of American Antiquarian Society
“The Girl-Boy,” Home Monthly 2 (December 1860): 397–398. Image Courtesy of the American Antiquarian Society
“The Girl-Boy,” Home Monthly 2 (December 1860): 397–398. Image Courtesy of the American Antiquarian Society
Eliza Leslie, “Billy Bedlow; or, the Girl-Boy,” Juvenile Miscellany 1, no. 3 (February 1832): 274–280. Image Courtesy of American Antiquarian Society
Eliza Leslie, “Billy Bedlow; or, the Girl-Boy,” Juvenile Miscellany 1, no. 3 (February 1832): 274–280. Image Courtesy of American Antiquarian Society
Eliza Leslie, “Billy Bedlow; or, the Girl-Boy,” Juvenile Miscellany 1, no. 3 (February 1832): 274–280. Image Courtesy of American Antiquarian Society
Eliza Leslie, “Billy Bedlow; or, the Girl-Boy,” Juvenile Miscellany 1, no. 3 (February 1832): 274–280. Image Courtesy of American Antiquarian Society
Eliza Leslie, “Billy Bedlow; or, the Girl-Boy,” Juvenile Miscellany 1, no. 3 (February 1832): 274–280. Image Courtesy of American Antiquarian Society
Eliza Leslie, “Billy Bedlow; or, the Girl-Boy,” Juvenile Miscellany 1, no. 3 (February 1832): 274–280. Image Courtesy of American Antiquarian Society
Eliza Leslie, “Billy Bedlow; or, the Girl-Boy,” Juvenile Miscellany 1, no. 3 (February 1832): 274–280. Image Courtesy of American Antiquarian Society
Eliza Leslie, “LUCY NELSON; Or, The Boy Girl,” Juvenile Miscellany 1, no. 2 (December 1831): 149–159. Image Courtesy of the American Antiquarian Society