June 28, 2010

2010: The Supreme Court of the United States rules in Christian Legal Society v. Martinez that public universities may refuse to recognize student organizations with discriminatory membership policies.

Source: http://www.thelavendereffect.org/2013/06/28/june-28-in-lgbtq-history/


June 28, 1970

1970: Christopher Street Liberation Day marks the first anniversary of the Stonewall riots in NYC with the first Gay Rights Parade in U.S. History. Simultaneous marches take place in Los Angeles and Chicago.

Source: http://www.thelavendereffect.org/2013/06/28/june-28-in-lgbtq-history/

June 28, 1969

 1969: Late night and into the early morning hours the next day, patrons of the Stonewall Inn in New York’s Greenwich Village fight back during a police raid, sparking three days of riots and the modern gay pride movement.

Source: http://www.thelavendereffect.org/2013/06/28/june-28-in-lgbtq-history/


June 28, 1934

1934: In Germany, approximately 300 Nazi Party members are arrested and murdered in a purge ordered by Adolf Hitler that comes to be known as the Night of the Long Knives. The most prominent victim of the purge is SA (Brown Shirts) chief Ernst Rohm, a gay man whom Hitler accuses of having formed a subversive “homosexual clique.” One year later to the day, the government enacts new, stricter legislation against male same-sex eroticism, partly formalizing the ongoing Nazi persecution of gay men.

Source: http://www.thelavendereffect.org/2013/06/28/june-28-in-lgbtq-history/

September 13, 2010

2010: Chief of the Defense Force of Australia Angus Houston issues an order lifting the ban on transgender personnel.

Source: http://www.thelavendereffect.org/2013/09/13/september-13-in-lgbtq-history/

September 13. 1997

 1997: The newly crowned Miss America, Kate Shindle, vows to dedicate her term to youth HIV prevention. When schools rein her in, she later tells Poz magazine, “Sometimes I feel like I’m banging my head against the wall.”

Source: http://www.thelavendereffect.org/2013/09/13/september-13-in-lgbtq-history/

September 13, 1996

 1996: In the U.S. Congress, a bill that would ban employment discrimination against lesbians and gay men is defeated by one vote.

Source: http://www.thelavendereffect.org/2013/09/13/september-13-in-lgbtq-history/

September 13, 1977

1977: Soap premieres on ABC with then unknown Billy Crystal playing Jodie Dallas, one of TV’s first prominent and sympathetic gay characters.

Source: http://www.thelavendereffect.org/2013/09/13/september-13-in-lgbtq-history/

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June 17, 2011

 2011, South Africa – A resolution submitted by South Africa requesting a study on discrimination and sexual orientation (A/HRC/17/L.9/Rev.1) passed, 23 to 19 with 3 abstentions, in the United Nations Human Rights Council. This is the first time that any United Nations body approved a resolution affirming the rights of LGBT people.

Source: https://ronnisanlo.com/today-in-lgbt-history-june-17-3/


June 17, 2008

 2008 – All-American University of Missouri diver Greg DeStephen comes out on Gay.com. In May of his sophomore year, DeStephen read a story on Gay.com about Maryland-Baltimore County swimmer Fred Deal announcing he was gay. DeStephen sent the website an email that he liked the Deal story and that he was a gay diver himself. The site responded asking if it could tell his story — the gay All-American diver in the heartland.

Source: https://ronnisanlo.com/today-in-lgbt-history-june-17-3/


June 17, 2006

 2006 – An estimated 2.4 million people took to the streets of Sao Paulo to celebrate the Brazilian city’s 10th annual Gay Pride parade. The record attendance, the largest in the world, was 1.8 million.

Source: https://ronnisanlo.com/today-in-lgbt-history-june-17-3/

June 17, 1981

1981 – Sen. Roger Jepson (R-IA) introduced the Family Protection Act in Congress. It specified that anyone who was homosexual or openly supportive of homosexuals could not receive student aid, social security, or veterans benefits; and regulated what public school textbooks could say about human sexuality. It never passed, and Jepson lost his bid for re-election when it was revealed he had a membership at a brothel.

Source: https://ronnisanlo.com/today-in-lgbt-history-june-17-3/

June 17, 1977

1977 – Vice President Walter Mondale angrily leaves a San Francisco Democratic fund-raising event when his speech on human rights in South America was interrupted by a man who demanded to know when he would speak in favor of gay rights. 

Members of the newly formed San Francisco Gay Democratic Club held up signs demanding a statement on human rights in the United States. The club was created by Harvey Milk (May 22, 1930 – November 27, 1978).

Source: https://ronnisanlo.com/today-in-lgbt-history-june-17-3/

June 17, 1968

 1968 – The documentary The Queen is released. It’s about a behind-the-scenes drag queen competition in New York City, directed by Frank Simon.

Source: https://ronnisanlo.com/today-in-lgbt-history-june-17-3/

June 17, 1959

 1959 – On this date a London court awarded pianist Liberace (May 16, 1919 – February 4, 1987) $22,400 in damages against the London Daily Mirror for implying that the flamboyant entertainer was a homosexual. Throughout his life, Liberace publicly denied he was gay. In Britain at the time, where he was popular enough to enjoy sell-out tours and be mobbed wherever he went, homosexuality was illegal. He was gay and died due to complications from AIDS.

Source: https://ronnisanlo.com/today-in-lgbt-history-june-17-3/

June 17, 1943

 1943 – Barry Manilow (born June 17, 1943) is born. He is an American singer-songwriter, arranger, musician, and producer with a career that has spanned over 50 years. He is best known for a long string of hit recordings such as “Mandy“, “Can’t Smile Without You“, and “Copacabana (At the Copa).” 

Before Manilow’s well-known association with Bette Midler began at the Continental Baths in New York City in 1971, he recorded four tracks as Featherbed, leading a group of session musicians produced by Tony Orlando. As Manilow accompanied artists on the piano for auditions and performances in the first two years of the 1970s, Midler caught his act in 1971 and chose the young arranger to assist her with the production of both her debut and sophomore releases The Divine Miss M (1972) and Bette Midler (1973), as well as act as her musical director on the eventual tour mounted for the former. Manilow worked with Midler from 1971 to 1975. 

In 1978, Manilow began a relationship with TV executive Garry Kief, who soon became his manager, and the two married in 2014, after same-sex marriage became legal in California. They kept the relationship and his sexual orientation secret until the marriage made headlines in 2015. Manilow officially came out as gay in April 2017, telling People that he had kept his sexual orientation quiet out of concern that it would disappoint his largely female fan base, but when his fans learned of the marriage, they were supportive.

Source: https://ronnisanlo.com/today-in-lgbt-history-june-17-3/

July 17, 1883

1883, Finland – Mauritz Stiller (July 17, 1883 – November 16, 1928) is born. He was a gay Finnish-Swedish film director, best known for discovering Greta Garbo (18 September 1905 – 15 April 1990) and bringing her to America. Stiller had been a pioneer of the Swedish film industry, writing and directing many short films from 1912. When MGM invited him to Hollywood as a director, he arrived with his new discovery Greta Gustafsson, whose screen name Greta Garbo is believed to have been his suggestion.

Source: https://ronnisanlo.com/today-in-lgbt-history-june-17-3/

June 18, 2006

 2006 – Mary Cheney (born March 14, 1969), lesbian daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney, released her memoir My Turn in which she attempts to make sense of her inaction and silence during the Bush/Cheney administration and its anti-gay record. The book’s sales were miserable, prompting author Andrew Sullivan to write: “There are flops, almighty flops and then there are books by Mary Cheney.” Mary Cheney has been with her partner, Heather Poe, since 1992. Cheney is openly lesbian, has voiced support for same-sex marriage, and has been credited with encouraging her father’s approval of same-sex marriage, which he has publicly supported since leaving the vice presidency.

Source: https://ronnisanlo.com/today-in-lgbt-history-june-18-3/

June 18, 1994

 1994 – The exhibition “Becoming Visible: The Legacy of Stonewall” opens at the New York Public Library. It is a history of New York’s lesbian and gay life. It is history told through unorthodox artifacts, beginning with a blue neon “Stonewall” sign and banks of public telephones at which visitors can hear oral recollections of the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar on Christopher Street, and of the nights in June 1969 when patrons battled the police rather than acquiesce to another raid.

Source: https://ronnisanlo.com/today-in-lgbt-history-june-18-3/

June 18, 1992


1992 – The soap opera One Life to Live airs the first openly gay teen character. Billy Douglas, a high school student, tells his best friend, Joey Buchanan, that he is gay. 

Newcomer actor Ryan Phillippe played the role from April 1992 until May 1993. 

The character is the first openly gay teenager featured in a television series, and Phillippe’s breakthrough role is considered groundbreaking in daytime television.

Source: 

https://ronnisanlo.com/today-in-lgbt-history-june-18-3/