America.
America.
On June 28th in 1969, an event that amplified the LGBT movements around the world occurred, lasting for six days after. Before this, though, gay communities…
Sylvia Rivera, a well known activist and drag queen present at the Stonewall Inn spoke of the typical raids that gay bars faced,“The routine was that the cops get their payoff, they confiscate the liquor… A padlock would go on the door. What we did, back then, was disappear to a coffee shop or any place in the neighborhood for fifteen minutes. You come back, the Mafia was there cutting the padlock off, bringing in more liquor, and back to business as usual” (Rivera). On the night of June 28th, 1969, the police raided the Stonewall Inn, and arrested 13. The raid in Stonewall was not new; the police raided Stonewall regularly, and patrons normally complied. Typically, the police would lineup the bar patrons and do a routine check to see what…
In the early morning hours of June 28, 1969 the streets of Greenwich Village in New York turned from the normal relaxed party scene to a nightmare of riotous proportions. In the next three days the gay liberation movement would hit an influential peak that would carry the movement into the 70’s and influence homophile history forever. Most historians agree that the Stonewall Riots were the marker for the gay liberation movement. While the events that occurred in 1969 changed the way homosexuals viewed liberation the movement began years before. In this essay, I hope to show that the Stonewall Riots became the peak of the gay liberation movement that found its origins in the 1950s.…
In the summer of 1969, Greenwich Village in New York erupted into protest against police raids on gay bars and establishments. The protests began with the raiding of the popular establishment The Stonewall Inn. The Stonewall riots proved pivotal in the gay rights movement, as the Sixties and Seventies marked the rise of queers rights activist groups that fought for equality through political means. However, the growing queer community was still seen as relatively docile and non-violent until the riots began, at which point the community began protesting with “uncharacteristic fury and outrage”. Foremost, The protests dramatically changed the depiction of the queer community in the media. Additionally, they kickstarted the rise of significant advancement for the cause of gay rights. Finally, the protests contributed widely to the birth of what became the modern pride movement. Overall, the events and Stonewall had a profound and dramatic influence on the gay rights movement in such ways that…
Thanks to those people feeling accepted they were able to start many organizations and start the fight for LGBT rights. Martin Boyce is a great example of someone who participated in the Stonewall Riots. A few months after the riots he went back to Hunter College in New York and decided that all the term papers he wrote would be gay. After college Martin Boyce moved back home to take care of his ill parents. While living at home Martin Boyce was working in restaurants to make ends meet. After his parents passed away he opened up his own restaurant called “Everybody’s Restaurant” where everyone was welcome. He and his business partner had come up with a slogan for brunch that said "We treat our customers like kings because the owners are a bunch of queens." If Boyce did not take part in the riots he might have never opened his restaurant. His restaurant brought everybody together and it was full of all love and no…
According to the History Channel in 1969, the Stonewall Inn (a gay club) was raided by police for the illegal distribution of alcohol. At first the crowd on the street watched quietly as the employees were arrested, but as three drag queens and a lesbian were put into a paddy wagon the onlookers started hurling bottles at the police. The policemen had to take cover in the building until reinforcements came. Soon the crowd was broken up, but they continued to protest in New York for the next several days(The Stonewall Riots). The situation had spiraled out of control because of New York prohibiting homosexuality in public. After the raiding of most of the gay establishments in New York, Stonewall was the last straw in the LGBTQ community and led to discussions about civil rights, advocacy groups, and many more things(The Leadership Conference). Much like the raiding of Stonewall, many occasions that affected the history of the LGBTQ spectrum had some sort of deeper meaning behind…
However, before the criminalization of homosexual behavior New York City and a handful of other cities across the United States saw a blossoming of gay culture. The subculture that developed specifically in New York’s Harlem was part of a greater moment widely referred to as the Harlem Renaissance. This movement was predominately Afro-American and covered countless aspects of culture. Gay men could congregate at the dozens of open gay bars with little disturbance from the police, a fact that would change greatly in the decades following the start of theGreat Depression. These bars drew white homosexuals to experience the vibrate subculture in Harlem and led to a forging of cross racial friendships that arguably could have laid the ground work…
Nonetheless, it was from the bars that the cutting edge gay rights development rose, amid the Stonewall mobs of 1969. The uproars, starting on June 28th, took after an assault on the Stonewall Inn, a well known gay bar at the time. They were driven by a differing gathering of trans ladies, gay men, lesbians, drag rulers, road adolescents, and others. In spite of the fact that not the primary uproars taking after a police attack of a gay bar, the Stonewall mobs were seemingly the most impactful, prodding the development of extremist gatherings and new discussions about group and activism. The Stonewall Riots are honored in the United States and around the globe by Pride occasions, frequently held amid the time of…
The purpose of this paper is to examine how the stonewall riots event of the LGBT community help gain their civil rights movements.…
Everyone, homosexual or not, knew that these riots were wars waged between society and its outcasts, and that they would affect generations to come. This was a moment that is equally as influential as the “I Have a Dream” speech by Martin Luther King Jr. and the integration of the “Little Rock Nine.” The Gay Liberation Front created the first parade to mark the anniversary of Stonewall. This parade was a giant success, and it was during this moment that people began to truly realize how far the gay rights movement had come. The Stonewall Uprising showed that homosexuals are people, and that they do have a voice in the world. They have the right to speak up for what is wrong and should not have to live in constant fear of the government and their peers. Stonewall paved the path to one of the most liberating movements in the history of the United States, and it all started with the simple, little word:…
It’s the early hours of June 28, 1969 when a routine police raid on The Stonewall Inn, a popular underground gay bar in Greenwich Village, sparks a full-scale riot. Police raids on gay bars were routine in the 1960s, but officers quickly lost control of the situation at the Stonewall Inn. Tensions between police and LGBTQ community members of Greenwich Village erupted into more protests the next evening, and again several nights later. Violent protests and street demonstrations continued for the next several days in what became known as The Stonewall Riots, thrusting a group of unlikely revolutionaries onto the frontlines of history and igniting one of the most influential social and political movements of the 20th Century.…
The Stonewall riots directly resulted in the birth of two new gay activist groups- the Gay Liberation Front, and the Gay Activists Alliance. The Gay Liberation Front (GLF) was formed immediately after the riots by Martha Shelley, Sylvia Rivera, Marsha P. Johnson, Michael Brown, Jerry Hoose, and Jim Owles. Sylvia Rivera and Marsha P. Johnson went on to become well known LGBTQ+ activists, founding STAR, a foundation advocating for queer and homeless women of color.The GLF took a more radical approach to activism than the Mattachine Society; their main idea was that all gay people coming out would give them liberation, and they were the first homophile group to use ‘gay’ in their name, which was a bold risk. However, they had no real order and…
Not many can deny that Stonewall was the birth place for the gay pride movement. It started from the years of discrimination and suppression of gays. It was a completely different time then from what it is now. Imagine having to hide how you felt, even from your own family. To be denied the pleasure of human interaction in public and having to resort to meeting in illegal bars.…
But LGBT citizens, the growth and development of sexual expression did not begin until the diminishing months of that decade in the heart of the nation’s largest gay commune, New York’s Greenwich Village. The Stonewall Riots started in the early hours of June 28, 1969 and lasted for six nights. This event quickly threw our sexual freedom out of the Dark Ages and into a new era. Today we have the social acceptance of millions which was surreal to our earlier generations. Sex between consenting adults of the same gender, in a private home, could be punishable to life in prison, imprisonment in mental institution, or even death. Due to the Stonewall Riots of 1969 we all live in harmony today…
The Untied States is a country that is more favorable towards gay men and lesbian women, but not completely. The Society for Human Rights in Chicago, Illinois was the first documented gay rights organization in the United States (“The American Gay Rights Movement”). This dates back to 1924. In 1951, The Mattachine Society was founded. This was the first national gay rights organization, founded by Harry Hay (“The American Gay Rights Movement”). Gays were pulled from military service during the 1950s and in 1953 gays were prohibited from Federal employment (“Milestones”). An FBI surveillance program followed, as homosexual acts were considered criminal. Additionally, the American Psychiatric Association listed homosexuality as a mental disorder until 1973 (“The American Gay Rights Movement”). The Stonewall Riots of 1969 was the most pivotal event in the Gay Rights Movement. Police raided the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in New York City. For the first time, the patrons fought back and initiated a riot that lasted three days (“Milestones”). Following this event, gays throughout the United States were liberated. Throughout the 1970s many other organizations were formed and…