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The Lavender Scare: The History of the Federal Government's Persecution of the Gay Community in the 20th Century
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Ironically, these men and women enjoyed even more freedom during Prohibition, as police units were too busy trying to break up speakeasies to bother them. Activist Doric Wilson recalled, "When I was very young, one of the terms for gay people was twilight people, meaning that we never came out until twilight, 'til it got dark. Gay bars were always on side streets out of the way in neighborhoods that nobody would go into. The windows were always cloaked." After decades of staying firmly out of public view, a number of groups formed in the years following World War II to try to legitimize homosexuality in American society. One of the major ones was the Mattachine Society, which began in 1950 in the home of Harry Hay, a known communist. This organization was focused primarily on assisting men who had been arrested as "sexual deviants," but over time, the group began to focus more and more on having gays accepted into society. Dick Leitsch, once the executive director of the Mattachine Society of New York (MSNY), explained, "At Mattachine we were just trying to legitimize being gay -- fighting employment discrimination, police entrapment, bar raids -- and the government and the police were trying to make it impossible to be gay."
Ironically, these men and women enjoyed even more freedom during Prohibition, as police units were too busy trying to break up speakeasies to bother them. Activist Doric Wilson recalled, "When I was very young, one of the terms for gay people was twilight people, meaning that we never came out until twilight, 'til it got dark. Gay bars were always on side streets out of the way in neighborhoods that nobody would go into. The windows were always cloaked." After decades of staying firmly out of public view, a number of groups formed in the years following World War II to try to legitimize homosexuality in American society. One of the major ones was the Mattachine Society, which began in 1950 in the home of Harry Hay, a known communist. This organization was focused primarily on assisting men who had been arrested as "sexual deviants," but over time, the group began to focus more and more on having gays accepted into society. Dick Leitsch, once the executive director of the Mattachine Society of New York (MSNY), explained, "At Mattachine we were just trying to legitimize being gay -- fighting employment discrimination, police entrapment, bar raids -- and the government and the police were trying to make it impossible to be gay."
Paperback
$8.99