United States of America: Difference between revisions

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* [[State of California]]
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* [[State of New York]]
* [[State of New York]]

Revision as of 20:45, 16 September 2021

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.

Turn of the Century (1890s-1900s)

  • 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.
  • 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" (1915). 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

  • 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 a book titled "Homosexual Life" in 1925. The book is an attempt at psychoanalyzing sexuality but has no real scientific or medical basis.
  • 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).


World War II (1930s-1940s)


Post-War (1940s-1960s)

Blue Discharges (1947)

Reasons for Discharge (1952)

  • The People's Voice, a labor newspaper in the State of Montana, publishes a Congressional study that showed 1/3 of discharges were for "neuro-psychiatric reasons", which included "homosexuality".

Guilty of Homosexuality (1952)

  • The Miami Times publishes a list of criminal charges pressed in court. Nora Jackson was sentenced to 40 days in jail for disorderly conduct and being "guilty of homosexuality" (July 19, 1952).


McCarthyism and Federal Persecution

  • See USA McCarthyism to learn more about the persecution of LGBTQIA+ communities during the McCarthy era under Senator Joe McCarthy.


Stonewall (1960s-1980s)


HIV/AIDS Crisis (1980s-1990s)


State Archives