Category: Today in LGBTQ History

November 23 in LGBTQ History

1983: A Federal judge concludes that the First National Bank of Louisville did not practice wrongful discrimination – or violate constitutional guarantees of freedom of religion – when it ordered one of its employees, Samuel Dorr, to either give up his position with gay Catholic group, Dignity, or resign from the bank.

November 21 in LGBTQ History

1987: Having raided and closed down gay bar The Detour (now 4100 bar on Sunset Boulevard) the night before, Los Angeles police raid and shut down the One Way bar, over alleged violations to the city’s fire ordinance.

November 19 in LGBTQ History

1980: Two men are killed and six wounded when former transit cop Ronald Crumpley opens fire with submachine gun at NYC gay bar, the Ramrod. He is later found not guilty by reason of insanity. 1982: A California judge tosses Marilyn Barnett’s so-called “palimony” suit against tennis star Billie Jean King out of court.

November 15 in LGBTQ History

1961: Washington, DC chapter of the Mattachine Society is formed. Activist Frank Kameny is elected president. 1987: Randy Shilts‘s seminal work on the early years of the AIDS crisis, “And the Band Played On” debuts at No. 12 on the New York Times best seller list. 1989: Massachusetts becomes the second state in the U.S. … Read More

November 13 in LGBTQ History

1979: San Francisco swears in its first openly gay police officers. Within a year, one out of every  seven new recruits is LGBT. –Source: Rutledge, Leigh W. The Gay Decades: From Stonewall to the Present : The People and Events That Shaped Gay Lives. New York, NY: Plume, 1992.  Print.

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