United States of America 19th Century (Articles): Difference between revisions
From LGBTQIA+ Archives Wiki
Archiveadmin (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Archiveadmin (talk | contribs) (→1860s) |
||
Line 43: | Line 43: | ||
* [[A Girl In Boys Clothes, Sunday Dispatch (Article, 1863)]] | * [[A Girl In Boys Clothes, Sunday Dispatch (Article, 1863)]] | ||
* [[Assuming The Other Sex's Garments, New York Dispatch (Article, 1866)]] | * [[Assuming The Other Sex's Garments, New York Dispatch (Article, 1866)]] | ||
* [[We Have Received a pamphlet, Charleston Daily News (Article, 1867)]] | |||
* [[Quite a laughable affair, Elk Advocate (Article, 1867)]] | * [[Quite a laughable affair, Elk Advocate (Article, 1867)]] | ||
* [[Fast woman of Cheyenne, Gold Hill Daily News (Article, 1868)]] | * [[Fast woman of Cheyenne, Gold Hill Daily News (Article, 1868)]] | ||
Line 58: | Line 59: | ||
File:1863-05-03-sunday-dispatch-a-girl-in-boys-clothes.png | File:1863-05-03-sunday-dispatch-a-girl-in-boys-clothes.png | ||
File:1866-09-09-new-york-dispatch-assuming-the-other-sexs-garments.png | File:1866-09-09-new-york-dispatch-assuming-the-other-sexs-garments.png | ||
File:1867-07-17-charleston-daily-news-received-a-pamphlet-entitled-an-appeal-against-the-anarchy-of-sex.png | |||
File:1867-11-21-elk-advocate-quite-a-laughable-affair.png | File:1867-11-21-elk-advocate-quite-a-laughable-affair.png | ||
File:1868-07-11-gold-hill-daily-news-fast-woman-of-cheyenne.png | File:1868-07-11-gold-hill-daily-news-fast-woman-of-cheyenne.png |
Revision as of 04:34, 20 December 2022
1830s
- What shall yet be the station woman may hold, Maumee Express (Article, 1838), brief use of the phrase "unsex" although meant pejoratively.
- A Penchant For Breeches, Morning Herald (Article, 1838), use of the phrase "unsex" for cross-dressing.
- Female Loveliness Superfluous Hair, Morning Herald (Ad, 1839), advertisement using "unsex" to describe women as having too masculine of a gender expression.
- Republicans In Europe, Morning Herald (Article, 1839), brief use of the phrase "unsex" although meant pejoratively.
1840s
- Biographical Sketches Of Some Of The Anciety Greek Literari, Litchfield Enquirer (Article, 1845), brief description of Sappho
- A Girl-Boy, Vermont Phoenix (Article, 1849)
1850s
- The Effect Of Bloomerism In France, New York Herald (Article, 1851), brief use of the phrase "third sex" while meant pejoratively might demonstrate a concept of androgyny.
- Pulled Again Annie alias Charlie, New York Dispatch (Article, 1856)
- The "Boy Girl" for California, Alexandria Gazette (Article, 1856)
1860s
- Mardi-Gras in New Orleans--Strange Procession, Daily Dispatch (Article, 1860)
- Smiling Blushing and Tobacco Chewing Young Woman, Gazette and Sentinel (Article, 1860)
- The Romance of the Camp, Grant County Herald (Article, 1861)
- A "Bould Sojer Boy", Cincinnati Daily Press (Article, 1862)
- A young woman bearing several masculine and feminine aliases, Weekly Pioneer and Democrat (Article, 1862)
- A She Sojer Boy, Delaware State Journal (Article, 1862)
- A Girl In Boys Clothes, Sunday Dispatch (Article, 1863)
- Assuming The Other Sex's Garments, New York Dispatch (Article, 1866)
- We Have Received a pamphlet, Charleston Daily News (Article, 1867)
- Quite a laughable affair, Elk Advocate (Article, 1867)
- Fast woman of Cheyenne, Gold Hill Daily News (Article, 1868)
- Adventure of a Girl in Male Attire, Wheeling Daily Register (Article, 1869)
- Secondary Males, New Orleans Crescent (Article, 1869)