United States of America: Difference between revisions

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A general overview of LGBTQIA+ movements and historical events. These also include international headlines related to LGBTQIA+ history from the perspective of residents in the United States.
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 Some materials may reflect outdated or discriminatory views, included here to document the historical context in which they existed.


= Early 20th Century (1880s-1910s) =
= 18th Century =
In the late 19th century, historical accounts and folklore revived interest in the lives of pirates who cross-dressed, or even romanticized lovers such as Anne Bonny and Mary Read. While historical records are unclear on the nature of their bond, their story became part of broader discussions about women defying traditional roles, and for some, a reflection of LGBTQIA+ identities in history. 


=== Major Events ===
* '''Read about [[United States of America 18th Century (Individuals) | 18th Century LGBTQIA+ Individuals]]'''
* [[Newport Sex Scandal (1919)]]


=== LGBTQIA+ Leaders and Icons ===
= 19th Century =
* [[William Dorsey Swann (1858-1925)]]
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. 


=== LGBTQIA+ Supporters ===
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. 
* [[Emma Goldman (1869-1940)]]


=== Possible LGBTQIA+ Individuals ===
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. 


* [[John W Lemke (1897-1919)]]
* '''Read more [[United States of America (19th Century) | LGBTQIA+ history in the 19th century]].'''
* [[Madame Louise "Lou" Graham (1861-1903)]]


=== Usage of "Homosexual/Homosexuality" ===
= 20th Century =  
<gallery>
Throughout the 20th century, LGBTQIA+ people fought for visibility while facing growing government restrictions. In the 1920s, queer culture thrived in underground spaces, but public depictions were censored. Mae West’s play ''The Drag'', which openly portrayed gay life, was banned before it could reach Broadway.
File:1898-12-16-cause-cure-of-anarchy.jpeg
File:1913-11-27-southern-pacific-scabs-were-herded.jpg
</gallery>


* Library of Congress, Chronicling America, first record using term "homosexual" in a piece titled "Cause and Cure of Anarchy" (1898) in the Omaha Daily Bee. The piece describes Luigi Lucheni, an Italian anarchist who assassinated Empress Elisabeth of Austria the same year, stating "he was like Caserio... in temperament a homo-sexual". Caserio may be referring to Italian anarchist Sante Geronimo Caserio, who assassinated President of France, Marie François Sadi Carnot in 1894. The article is largely an attempt at psychoanalyzing people with anarchist leanings but has no real scientific or medical basis.
By the 1930s, governments cracked down harder. In Nazi Germany, LGBTQIA+ people were targeted through book burnings and police raids. Many were sent to concentration camps, marked with pink triangles, and subjected to brutal treatment. Reports of these horrors spread in the 1940s as troops liberated the camps and courts convicted those involved, revealing the extent of Nazi persecution. Afterwards, returning to the U.S., LGBTQIA+ service members faced discrimination and were discharged from the military under "blue discharges," stripping them of veterans’ benefits.
* Library of Congress, Chronicling America, next record using term "homosexuality" in a piece by Voice of the People titled "How the Southern Pacific Scabs were Herded" (1913). The piece describes homosexuality and prostitution as forms of degeneracy which are allegedly popular topics being discussed by scabs waiting for work. The article is written from the perspective of a union worker reporting to a Louisiana socialist newspaper.


= 1920s =
At the height of the Cold War in the 1950s, the U.S. government labeled LGBTQIA+ people as security risks. Thousands lost their jobs in a wave of discrimination, while activists faced censorship. Yet, resistance grew. ''One: The Homosexual Magazine'' won a Supreme Court case protecting its right to distribute, marking one of the first legal victories for LGBTQIA+ rights.
* A Chicago newspaper affiliated with the Communist Party remarks on the opening of the Institute for Sex Science in [[Germany]] under Dr. Hirschfeld (March 4, 1924).
* William J. Fielding publishes [[Homosexual Life (1925)]].
* [[Mae West]]'s play ''The Drag'' is banned in the [[State of New York]], some of the cast is arrested. The play is reported to have had strong "homosexual" themes (February 1, 1927).


<gallery>
By the 1960s and 1970s, the government took surveillance even further. Under FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, the agency monitored LGBTQIA+ organizations, tracking activists and gathering intelligence on groups like the Mattachine Society and the Daughters of Bilitis. Despite this, LGBTQIA+ activism gained momentum. The Mattachine Society fought legal battles for recognition, standing up to Congress and the courts. Though challenges remained, their efforts paved the way for future activism, proving that LGBTQIA+ people would not be silenced.
File:1924-03-04-daily-worker-institute-for-sex-science-germany.png
File:1927-02-01-new-britain-herald-the-drag-held-as-offensive.png
</gallery>


= World War II (1930s-1940s) =
* '''Read more [[United States of America (20th Century) | LGBTQIA+ history in the 20th century]].'''


* See [[USA World War II]]


== More Articles ==
== US Records ==
<gallery>
* [[Army LGBTQIA Records (USA)]]
File:1944-01-20-transvestism-more-an-outlet.png
* [[FBI LGBTQIA Records (USA)]]
</gallery>
* [[Police Records (USA)]]
 
* [[White House LGBTQIA Records (USA)]]
* The Waterbury Democrat in the [[State of Connecticut]] publishes an op-ed on cross-dressing.
 
 
= Post-War (1940s-1960s) =
 
* Homophile Movement (1950s-1960s)
* [[Mattachine Society]] (1950s-1960s)
* [[McCarthyism (USA)]]
* [[FBI Sex Deviates (USA)]]
 
== LGBTQIA+ Publications ==
* [[Vice Versa]], subscription by [[Lisa Ben]]
* One, magazine by the [[Mattachine Society]]
 
== Decades ==
* [[United States of America 1940s]]
* [[United States of America 1950s]]
 
= Stonewall (1960s-1980s) =
 
== Decades ==
* [[United States of America 1960s]]
* [[United States of America 1970s]]
 
== Major Events ==
 
* [[Stonewall Riots]]
* [[Christopher Street Liberation Day]]
* [[Gay Freedom Day]]
 
== LGBTQIA+ Leaders and Icons ==
 
* [[James Baldwin]]
* [[Marsha P. Johnson]]
* [[Sylvia Rivera]]
* [[Samuel Steward]]
 
 
= HIV/AIDS Crisis (1980s-1990s) =
* [[ACT UP]]
 
== Decades ==
* [[United States of America 1980s]]
* [[United States of America 1990s]]
 
= Current Events =
 
== 2019 ==
* January 20th, 2021 - President Joe Biden signs the [[Executive Order 13988]], Preventing and Combating Discrimination on the Basis of Gender Identity or Sexual Orientation.
 
== 2022 ==
* February 22nd, 2022 - Greg Abbott, Governor of [[State of Texas | Texas]], issues a [[2022-02-22 State of Texas Executive Directive|directive]] requiring the state's Department of Family and Protective Services to investigate supportive families of transgender youth for "child abuse".
* March 28th, 2022 - Ron DeSantis, Governor of [[State of Florida | Florida]], signs the "Don't Say Gay" bill. The bill restricts teachers from discussions about sexual orientation and gender identity, and is so broad that even rainbow flags and photos of same-sex partners had to be removed from classrooms.
* June 3rd, 2022 - CatholicVote, a conservative Catholic group, launches "Hide the Pride" to attempt to checkout LGBTQ-themed books from public libraries and free libraries to prevent interested readers from accessing them.
* June 11th, 2022 - In [[San Lorenzo, California]] a group of Proud Boys targeted a Drag Queen Story Hour event taking place at the San Lorenzo Library shouting insults and attempting to disrupt it.
* June 11th, 2022 - In [[Couer D'Alene, Idaho]] 31 Patriot Front members, a far-right White Supremacist group, were arrested likely with intent to cause violence at a Pride event.
* June 15th, 2022 - President Joe Biden signs the [[Executive Order 14075]], Advancing Equality for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, and Intersex Individuals.
* June 29th, 2022 - In [[Kent, Washington]] the Kent School District board of directors votes 2-1 to leave "Jack of Hearts (and Other Parts)" by Lev AC Rosen in middle school libraries following controversy initially raised by one of the school principals. The book challenge began in December of 2021 and was successfully pushed back by LGBTQ activists, librarians, and other locals.
* July 19th, 2022 - the House of Representatives passes the [[Respect for Marriage Act]] by 267-157, all Democratic Party members voted yes, 47 GOP members also voted yes, 157 GOP members voted no.
* July 23rd, 2022 - UpRising Bakery in Chicago area cancels drag event after vandalism and harassment.


= Related Pages =
= Related Pages =
* [[FBI Activity On LGBTQIA Organizations (USA)]]
* [[History of Censorship (USA)]]
* [[History of Censorship (USA)]]
* [[History of Cross-Gender Acting (USA)]]
* [[History of Drag (USA)]]
* [[History of Entrapment (USA)]]
* [[History of Entrapment (USA)]]
* [[History of Hate Crimes (USA)]]
* [[History of LGBTQ Terms (USA)]]
* [[History of Panic Defense (USA)]]
* [[History of Panic Defense (USA)]]
* [[History of Police Raids (USA)]]
* [[History of Police Raids (USA)]]
* [[McCarthyism (USA)]]
* [[Landmark Supreme Court Cases (USA)]]
* [[United States of America (Aging Events)]] for some events that will need documenting.


= State Archives =
= State and Territory Archives =
 
* [[State of California]]
* [[State of California]]
* [[State of Colorado]]
* [[State of Colorado]]
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* [[State of Idaho]]
* [[State of Idaho]]
* [[State of Michigan]]
* [[State of Michigan]]
* [[State of Minnesota]]
* [[State of Mississippi]]
* [[State of New York]]
* [[State of New York]]
* [[State of Oklahoma]]
* [[State of Oklahoma]]
* [[State of Tennessee]]
* [[State of Texas]]
* [[State of Texas]]
* [[State of Washington]]
* [[State of Washington]]
* [[State of Wisconsin]]
* [[Virgin Islands of the United States]]
* [[Washington D.C.]]
* [[Washington D.C.]]

Latest revision as of 01:43, 2 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.

18th Century

In the late 19th century, historical accounts and folklore revived interest in the lives of pirates who cross-dressed, or even romanticized lovers such as Anne Bonny and Mary Read. While historical records are unclear on the nature of their bond, their story became part of broader discussions about women defying traditional roles, and for some, a reflection of LGBTQIA+ identities in history.

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

Throughout the 20th century, LGBTQIA+ people fought for visibility while facing growing government restrictions. In the 1920s, queer culture thrived in underground spaces, but public depictions were censored. Mae West’s play The Drag, which openly portrayed gay life, was banned before it could reach Broadway.

By the 1930s, governments cracked down harder. In Nazi Germany, LGBTQIA+ people were targeted through book burnings and police raids. Many were sent to concentration camps, marked with pink triangles, and subjected to brutal treatment. Reports of these horrors spread in the 1940s as troops liberated the camps and courts convicted those involved, revealing the extent of Nazi persecution. Afterwards, returning to the U.S., LGBTQIA+ service members faced discrimination and were discharged from the military under "blue discharges," stripping them of veterans’ benefits.

At the height of the Cold War in the 1950s, the U.S. government labeled LGBTQIA+ people as security risks. Thousands lost their jobs in a wave of discrimination, while activists faced censorship. Yet, resistance grew. One: The Homosexual Magazine won a Supreme Court case protecting its right to distribute, marking one of the first legal victories for LGBTQIA+ rights.

By the 1960s and 1970s, the government took surveillance even further. Under FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, the agency monitored LGBTQIA+ organizations, tracking activists and gathering intelligence on groups like the Mattachine Society and the Daughters of Bilitis. Despite this, LGBTQIA+ activism gained momentum. The Mattachine Society fought legal battles for recognition, standing up to Congress and the courts. Though challenges remained, their efforts paved the way for future activism, proving that LGBTQIA+ people would not be silenced.


US Records

Related Pages

State and Territory Archives