During the mid 1900’s, New York City’s queer citizens were discriminated against and faced an anti-gay system. The Stonewall Uprisings were a set of raids and riots in the 1960’s that took place for six days involving thousands of people in Greenwich Village. They were the result of hundreds of years of discrimination and violence against gay and transgender people in America as well as the influence of new thinkers like the writers of the “Beat Generation” who were trying to express their individuality and unconventional thinking. Because of this movement, gay liberation and the fight for modern LGBT rights in the United States changed. Activist groups formed and were inspired to find safe places for them to express their sexual orientation …show more content…
There were frequent “smaller” raids on the Stonewall before Pine’s order to enforce laws against selling alcohol to homosexuals. Raids were carried out in such a way that the police would arrest anyone who didn’t “fit” the typical heterosexual stereotype or anyone who was wearing unusual attire, they would “arrest the bartenders for liquor violations, inspect the identification cards of patrons, and take those not wearing at least three articles of gender-appropriate clothing into custody” . Pine and his officers came into the Stonewall Inn with a warrant and found “bootlegged alcohol, arrested 13 people, including employees and people violent that state’s gender-appropriate clothings statue” . After the third day of raids, the LGBT community was fed up resulting in 500 to 600 people gathering in front of the Stonewall Inn shouting and fighting back against the police. With so many supporters, the LGBT community ultimately outnumbered the police forcing Pine to call for backup and barricading himself and his men in the bar for protection. This was the event that united them, the LGBT crowd figured out that the police were in fact running away from them, having strength in numbers and were capable to overpower the police: “For forty-five minutes the mob persisted, using an uprooted parking meter as a battering ram …show more content…
Even though there was a change and an awareness on the LGBT community, many people still didn’t accept homosexuals. Gay individuals still faced discrimination, verbal abuse and physical violence. Despite this, the LGBT community continued to raise awareness and advocate for their rights. In 2011, the Marriage Equality Act which legalized same-sex marriage for New York residents, was signed by Governor Andrew Cuomo, making New York the 6th state to legalize same-sex marriage. It was said by many people including some religious leaders that this was a threat to traditional heterosexual marriage and family, “Marriage is a fundamental good that must be protected in every circumstance. Exemptions of any kind never justify redefining marriage.’...[it]...affirms the vital and unique importance to children of receiving care from both their mother and father together. ... Making marriage law indifferent to the absence of either sex creates an institutional and cultural crisis with generational ramifications yet to be seen’’.The LGBT community rejected those statements and developed legal arguments to battle the entrenched discrimination. Furthermore, the LGBT community began to hold a pride parade on the anniversary of the Stonewall Riots. This occurs in New York and other major cities around the world at the end of
The Importance of the Stonewall Riots and Their Lasting Effects on the Gay Rights Movement
The conditions faced by queer people leading up to the stonewall riots were appalling. Laws and Statutes made it legal to discriminate against LGBT+ individuals based on dress and behavior and to limit other basic freedoms as well. In the 50’s and 60’s, 49 of 50 states in the United States had some form of law that stated homosexuality was illegal and was punishable by fines or imprisonment (Staff). Up until 1987, homosexuality was considered a mental illness in the DSM (American Classification of Mental Disorders). In following, it was illegal to serve gay people alcohol in New York City up until 1966, thirty three years after prohibition was repealed (History). Under the statement that the gathering
As previously stated, there were laws governing how people could dress. There was also an event similar to the Stonewall Riots in San Francisco three years before, the Compton riot. However, Stonewall is really seen as the beginning point for the LGBT+ rights movement of the sixties and seventies. The Stonewall Riots took place in the gay bar Stonewall Inn, which is located in Greenwich Village in New York City. Following a police raid, several riots broke out, with bottles and bricks being thrown at the police, and although the police called for backup, the riots lasted for about five days.
History.com notes this treatment saying, "the New York State Liquor Authority penalized and shut down establishments that served alcohol to known or suspected LGBT individuals, arguing that the mere gathering of homosexuals was “disorderly.” ” Due to the unjust treatment that the LGBTQ community faced, exampled through the treatment at Stonewall, it became a moment that they could seize and use to become a symbol of queer liberation. As Movement and Memory by Elizabeth Armstrong notes “That these conditions came together in New York in 1969, as opposed to in other cities at earlier was a result of historical and political processes: time and place mattered. Gay liberation was already underway in New York
The 1960’s was a decade of great change in America, from civil rights for African Americans to equal rights for women, the American people were rising up and discovering that their voice in the political discourse was just as important as those they elected to office. One other such group that awakened and challenged the existing status quo that kept them silent and scared were the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) communities across the country. From the first large-scale associations of LGBT individuals that formed in San Francisco in the 1950’s to the political and social groups that came to be following the Stonewall Riots of 1969, they would speak out and not allow themselves to be kept down anymore. The aim of this paper is to establish the events and opinions that led up to the uprising at the Stonewall Inn such as perceived and real discrimination by police, medical professionals, and society itself, what actually happened at Stonewall, and how they sparked the modern LGBT movement in the United States over the next half century to the present day.
Historian David Carter, provides an intriguing in-depth look into the historical impact of the Stonewall Riots in Stonewall: The Riots that Sparked the Gay Revolution. This engaging book adds to the genre of sexual orientation discrimination. Carter extensively analyzes the various factors that played a role in igniting the Stonewall riots and the historical impact that the riots had on the Gay Revolution and movement for gay equality. Through the use of interviews, newspapers, and maps, Carter argues that the riots were a product of many geographical, social, political, and cultural factors. Carter further argues that the riots ultimately led to the forming of the Gay Revolution and caused sexual orientation to be a protected category
History is a complex chain of reactions; everything is the result of one event and the causation of another. Thus, if traced back decades, the Stonewall riots were the result of building social tensions in the United States and the approaches taken towards unearthing the psychology behind homosexuality. Following the upheaval caused during World War II, the people of the United States were eager to restore order in all elements of society. Security became the most valuable asset, making anyone who posed even a remote threat to the “American way” a target. An emphasis on anti-communism spurred by Senator Joseph McCarthy led to the onset of a national state of paranoia and disorder, alongside anarchists, supporters of radical revolution, and communists, the queer population was lumped into a category of people considered a threat to the United States government. Homosexuality was just short of a death sentence for those concealing their sexuality, so much so that during the late 1940s nearly 5,000
The increase in support can be seen through the number of people who attend pride parades each year, which are now taking place in almost every country nowadays. The growth of the gay rights supporters compared to amount at the first pride parade in 1970 displays that the lives of the LGBT are being acknowledged and will continue to be spread and talked about in earnest as things progress for their community (Hirshman). The major shift from the 1960s race, gender, and sexual orientation discrimination to the acknowledgement of women’s rights and needs, African American opportunities and equality, and increase in trans and gay rights in the present show that the civil rights movement of Stonewall, Black rights, and women’s equality had a major effect on the future of society today (Williams). The effects of the Stonewall Riots can also be seen through the Supreme Court’s legalization of same sex marriage in all states in 2015. This is the biggest change in the journey for gay liberation in America and it’s evidence of the growing support that began with the riots and has continued on to the present.
My book’s topic was the Stonewall riots in New York. The Stonewall riots were a series of impulsive, violent protests by members of the gay community against a police raid that took place in the early morning hours of June 28, 1969, at the Stonewall Inn, located in the Greenwich Village neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. They are widely considered to have established the single most significant event leading to the gay liberation movement and the modern fight for gay rights in the United States.
Fifty years ago, in the early sixties, being gay was illegal in every providence in Canada, and in every single state in the United States. In the 1950’s, many gay individuals saw the men who had devoted their lives to being out and they knew what a horrible life that made for those men. This caused many gay men to “pass,” or live their entire lives in the closet. They would marry women for the soul purpose of protecting their secret. Before the stonewall riots, many Americans did not even believe gay people existed. Due to the lack of education and bigotry amongst Americans, being gay was very dangerous. Sexual acts in the gay community were commonly done in unsafe places and in public because they simply had nowhere else to go. Homosexuality was not just criminalized it was medicalized (Bawer). If you were gay, you could be subject to go into hospitals and were viewed by society as having a disability and a disease. In April of 1965, the very first gay protest took place in Washington DC. This protest was revolutionary and it began to pave the way for the future of gay men and women and reshape gay culture. In 1969, not long after the first gay protests of 1965, Canada decriminalized homosexual sexual acts in the privacy of one’s own home (Guerre). This was groundbreaking and gave the gay community hope that change was coming. Also, taking place in 1969 were the historic stonewall
Gay rights movements in the US can be traced back to the Stonewall Riots that occurred following a police raid on the Stonewall Inn in New York City at 3a.m on June 28th, 1969 (“Should Gay Marriage Be Legal?”). In the 1950’s and 1960’s, gay Americans were faced to a harsh anti gay legal system, thus taking away their rights for marriage. This resulted in the Stonewall Riots. Nowadays, 92 percent of the LGBT youth say they hear negative messages about the LGBT, their top sources being school, the internet, and their peers (Growing Up LGBT In America). American youth tends to have many hardships thrown at them by those who aren't like them creating a barrier between each other. F The hate against the LGBT is a major problem in america, stopping us from being a united
Until the last half of the 20th century, lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender individuals were victims of discrimination in American society and in statutory laws, which limited their basic rights. On the night of June 28, 1969, police raided the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in New York’s Greenwich Village, and arrested three drag queens by using excessive force. Bar patrons and spectators, tired of police oppression, stood up and fought back. This was the first major protest based on equal rights for homosexuals. The Stonewall Riots became a turning point for the homosexual community in the United States sparking the beginning of the gay rights movement, and encouraged lesbian, gay, bisexual and transsexual, or "LGBT," to fight for their rights.
The gay liberation movement occurred in Greenwich Village, New York. In June 1969, police invaded the Stone Wall Inn, a bar for gays. The gay people at the club became angered by the police actions, because they felt that it was unprovoked harassment. They fought for several nights, refusing to have the bar closed. This incident, generally referred to as Stonewall, has been noted as the beginning of the awakening of gays into personal and sexual liberation.
One of the greatest poets of the twentieth century, Dr Seuss, once said, "Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind". Essentially, this advice is applicable to any given individual, yet it seems that it is most suitable for homosexuals, and therefore why it lies within the heart of gay rights. It is inevitable, that as a minority group, homosexuals will find that they will encounter more people who “mind” than heterosexuals. This particular discrimination has been occurring for decades all across the globe; however it became prominent in the United States in the 1950s. In 1953, under President Eisenhower, it was decided that homosexuality was a sufficient enough reason in itself to fire people from federal jobs. This executive order stood from 1953 until 1993, providing support to the idea that discrimination in employment ranked as the worst type of persecution gay people faced at the time, second only to physical assault. Throughout the 1950s and well into the 1960s, both lesbian and male drag queens suffered from frequent rapes and sexual assaults committed by police officers. Further, those same police officers were certainly no help when gays were being abused and raped by other hateful individuals. It was not until June 28, 1969 that a group of gay customers at the Stonewall Inn, a popular gay bar in Greenwich Village, finally took a stand against the police harassment and created a riot. The
For many years, the LGBT community, standing for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender, in America has suffered injustice after injustice at the hands of those who choose to discriminate against them. But the aggression towards homosexuals came to a boiling point in New York in the late 1960s. One of the most well known of these homophobic events were the riots just outside the Stonewall Inn on Christopher Street in New York. Many historians, such as Duberman and Deitcher, would place the blame solely on the police force however, the police raids were responsible for the Stonewall riots in 1969 to a small extent because other factors such as the legal discrimination of homosexuals, and the media’s censorship of the gay movement had a much stronger impact leading to the most influential gay rights riot in US history.