United States of America: Difference between revisions

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= 20th Century =
= 20th Century =


== Decades ==
* '''Read more [[United States of America (20th Century) | LGBTQIA+ history in the 20th century]].'''
* [[United States of America 20th Century (Articles)]]
* [[United States of America 1900s]]
* [[United States of America 1910s]]
* [[United States of America 1920s]]
* [[United States of America 1930s]]
* [[United States of America 1940s]]
* [[United States of America 1950s]]
* [[United States of America 1960s]]
* [[United States of America 1970s]]
* [[United States of America 1980s]]
* [[United States of America 1990s]]


=== US Records ===
 
== US Records ==
* [[Army LGBTQIA Records (USA)]]
* [[Army LGBTQIA Records (USA)]]
* [[FBI LGBTQIA Records (USA)]]
* [[FBI LGBTQIA Records (USA)]]
* [[Police Records (USA)]]
* [[Police Records (USA)]]
* [[White House LGBTQIA Records (USA)]]
* [[White House LGBTQIA Records (USA)]]
== Major Events ==
* [[Stonewall Riots]]
* [[Christopher Street Liberation Day]]
* [[Gay Freedom Day]]
* [[Black Nite Brawl]]
== Major Organizations ==
* [[ACT UP]]
* [[Gay Activists Alliance]]
* [[Gay Liberation Front]]
* [[Mattachine Society]]
* [[National Coalition of Gay Organizations]]
* Homophile Movement
== LGBTQIA+ Publications ==
* [[Vice Versa]], subscription by [[Lisa Ben]]
* One, Inc.
== LGBTQIA+ Leaders and Icons ==
* [[Bayard Rustin (1912-1987)]]
* [[James Baldwin]]
* [[Lee Craig Schoonmaker (1944-2018)]]
* [[Marsha P. Johnson]]
* [[Matthew Shepard (1976-1998)]]
* [[Sylvia Rivera]]
* [[Samuel Steward]]
== Possible LGBTQIA+ Individuals ==
* [[John W Lemke (1897-1919)]]
== LGBTQIA+ Supporters ==
* [[Emma Goldman (1869-1940)]]





Revision as of 05:12, 1 March 2025

This page provides an overview of LGBTQIA+ history in the United States, including key events, legal milestones, and social movements. It highlights both progress and challenges while preserving historical records for research and education. Some materials may reflect outdated or discriminatory views, included here to document the historical context in which they existed.


19th Century

The 19th century had strict gender roles, but historical records show people living beyond those expectations. Newspaper articles from the 1830s describe women wearing breeches instead of dresses, facing criticism and being labeled "unsexed." Some accounts mention women who lived as men, sometimes for survival or better opportunities, and other situations of transgender men who lived authentically despite legal and social barriers.

Some publications in the 1850s discussed a "third sex," often in response to women wearing shorter skirts and loose trousers known as bloomers. This style, popularized by women's rights activists, challenged expectations of how women should dress and behave. By the 1860s, newspaper articles reference Macintosh balls, gatherings where drag performers and gender expression played a central role, reflecting early forms of ball culture.

One well-documented figure from this period was James Barry (1789–1865), a transgender man and respected surgeon. Historical records like these show that transgender and gender-diverse people have always existed, even if history has not always recognized them.

20th Century


US Records


Related Pages

State and Territory Archives