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| <gallery> | | <gallery> |
| File:1924-03-04-daily-worker-institute-for-sex-science-germany.png | | File:1924-03-04-daily-worker-institute-for-sex-science-germany.png |
| </gallery>
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| == 1930s ==
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| === World War II ===
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| ==== "More Arrests", "German Rumors Still Persist" (December, 1934) ====
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| The Waterbury Democrat in, a newspaper in the [[State of Connecticut]], describes mass arrests and a "drive against homo-sexuals in German cities".
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| <gallery>
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| File:1934-12-27-waterbury-democrat-more-arrests.png
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| File:1934-12-28-waterbury-democrat-german-rumors-still-persist.png
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| </gallery> | | </gallery> |
Revision as of 03:41, 16 September 2021
LGBTQIA+ History in Germany
1920s
Magnus Hirschfeld and the Institute for Sex Science
"Birth Control Clinic Opens in Germany" (March 3rd, 1924)
The Daily Worker, a Chicago newspaper, publishes an article detailing the opening of Dr. Hirschfeld's Institute for Sex Science (sexualwissenschaft).