On the
night of June 27, 1969 something snapped
when New York City Police made one of their regular raids on a Gay bar.
Instead of meekly submitting to arrest,
the denizens of the Stonewall Inn, a Greenwich
Village bar operated by the Mafia
and patronized by the most
marginalized of folks—homeless street kid hustlers, drag
queens, butch dikes, and
others resisted when
police started to arrest them.
The raid
was conducted by a small team of
detectives, uniformed officers
including women led by Deputy
Inspector Seymour Pine of the Public Morals Squad.
For some reason patrons refused to follow the familiar procedure of such raids—allowing restroom inspections of individuals
in women’s clothing to determine if
they were men and providing
identification upon request. Dumfounded
by resistance, police called for backup
and patrol wagons. There was
some scuffling inside.
The Stonewall in looked just as seedy as it was. |
Meanwhile some patrons who had been released were joined by
passersby outside the bar. The crowd
quickly swelled. Taunts and
jeers were exchanged between the
police and crowd. The crowd began to interfere
as drag queens were led to the wagons. When a lesbian made several
unsuccessful attempts to escape,
she was beaten and cried out to the
crowd, “Why don’t you guys do something?”
That ignited the
crowd which began pelting police
with beer cans, coins, and rubble from a
nearby construction sight.
They attacked the wagons, freeing some of those arrested.
Police retreated into the bar and barricaded themselves. They grabbed some members of the crowd as
they went, including folk singer Dave Van Ronk who had been playing at a nearby club and came out to investigate the ruckus, and
Howard Smith, a writer for the Village Voice.
Observers reported that the most aggressive members of the crowd
were the young street kids.
They used an uprooted parking meter
as a ram to try and break down the doors of the bar and crashed through the plywood covered windows. When
they got in police drew their pistols
and threatened to shoot while rioters used lighter fluid to start a
fire.
The Fire Department responded as the crowd outside grew to hundreds. The
Tactical Police Force (TPF) arrived in riot
gear to rescue the besieged
officers in the saloon. They formed
a phalanx and moved up the street
being blocked and taunted by an impromptu
kick line of drag queens and “sissies.”
Drag queens played a leading role in the resistance after the police raid in the the nights that followed. |
Rioters and police played
a brand of violent tag around the narrow
streets of the Village until after 4 AM.
Later that morning the riots were front page news.
And they were not
over. The next night even larger crowds gathered in front of the
building and fighting continued. Despite heavy rain there were sporadic
eruptions the next two nights.
Meanwhile the Gay
community, which had been largely
unorganized except for the small Mattachine Society which advocated a campaign to educate the public that Homosexuals were
“normal,” began to meet and debate tactics. Thousands of fliers were printed for a Wednesday march.
The original
rebellion, which had been entirely
spontaneous, was already laying the
groundwork for a new, open and
defiant Gay movement. Taking
cues from the Civil Rights Movement and the Peace Movement,
which were also confronting authorities
with a new militancy, and taking
advantage of the traditional
anti-establishment radicalism of the Village, the beginning of a new
movement was taking place.
On Wednesday the Village Voice—the most liberal paper in New York, carried
a harshly critical piece on the
riots describing participants as “forces of faggotry.” Angry demonstrators descended on the Voice offices that night
and threatened to burn them down.
Other violent confrontations erupted in the neighborhood as police tried to
stop marchers, this time for the first
time carrying signs and “making
demands.”
That was the last
night of disturbances, but things changed
quickly over the next year. Two new
militant Gay organizations emerged in New York, the Gay Liberation Front,
which allied itself with the broader
radical movement, and the Gay Activists Alliance which advocated a
focused campaign demanding an end to police harassment and for broader rights for Gays.
Similar or allied
groups sprang up in major cities and college towns across the country. New Yorkers founded three
new newspapers, Gay, Come Out!, and Gay Power which
soon had press runs to
20-2500. Again, similar publications were founded across the
country.
The Christopher Street March on the first anniversary of the Stonewall Rebellion is considered the founding event of the Gay Pride marches now held internationally. |
On June 28, 1970 the anniversary of what was now being
called the Stonewall Rebellion was marked by Christopher Street
Liberation Day and a 51 block march
from the Village to Central Park with thousands of marchers filling the
streets. Marches were also held in Chicago and Los
Angeles.
These became the Gay Pride Marches that have become
annual events across the country.
There was a huge march this Sunday
in Chicago. An indication
of how accepted and mainstream Gay
rights have become, at least in big
cities, is that there were official
floats sponsored by the city’s
sports teams. Politicians galore
and all of the major media turn out
to court the potent Gay vote and consumer demographic. But there
were still loads drag queens and all of the high camp fun that the
carnival-like parades have become known for.
Resistance was a theme at many Gay Pride marches this year like this one in Los Angeles. |
But this year Gay Pride Parades also reflected a community increasingly under siege by a well-oiled and funded backlash led by religious
zealots and abetted by the radicalized Republican Party eager to pander to a big part of its base. With
Republicans in complete control of many governorships
and State houses rafts of anti-Gay legislation have been enacted or proposed.
And now the Cheeto-in-Charge,
who in an earlier incarnation had proclaimed himself a “friend of the Gays,” has lent his full blather and bluster to stoking the fires of repression.
He let Gay Pride Month pass
without even the most tepid
acknowledgement but pointedly spoke to
a meeting of an ardently anti-Gay religious
group. He also signed an Executive Order supposedly
in support of religious liberty that
gives free reign to churches, charities, businesses, and individual professionals and crafts people to discriminate against
Gays in almost every way. Hell, it virtually invites them to do so. Internationally
Trump had refused to protest and
seemed to endorse his pal Vladimir Putin’s increasingly violent
suppression of Gays in Russia and
practically endorsed the even more extreme repression by Turkey which is rapidly turning into a right wing Islamic dictatorship. His proposed
budget stripped funding from HIV/AIDS research and he supports the Senate Republican health care bill that
will strip coverage to many.
So it was not a surprise
that in the midst of the usual party, floats
and marching units spoke
out. Or that in several cities outright
protests broke out around or in the parades.
48 years after the fact Pride
Month has returned to its roots—Resistance!
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