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Barbara Gittings: About

Barbara Gittings

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Who was Barbara Gittings?

Barbara Gittings (1932 - 2007) is widely regarded as the mother of the LGBT civil rights movement. In the 1950s gay activism was in its infancy. “There were scarcely 200 of us in the whole United States,” Gittings said of her fellow crusaders. “It was like a club—we all knew each other.”

Although Gittings lived in Philadelphia, in 1958 she started the New York chapter of the Daughters of Bilitis (DOB). Founded in San Francisco, the DOB was the first lesbian civil rights organization in the United States. From 1963 to 1966, Gittings was the editor of the DOB’s publication, The Ladder, the first national lesbian magazine.

With fellow organizer Frank Kameny, Gittings helped enlist activists from New York, Washington, D.C., and Philadelphia for the first public demonstrations for gay and lesbian equality. Held in front of Independence Hall each Fourth of July from 1965 to 1969, the protests known as Annual Reminders paved the way for the Stonewall riot in 1969. At the 1965 Annual Reminder, 40 brave, openly gay picketers carried signs demanding equality. By 1969 their numbers had more than tripled.

After 1969, Kameny, Gittings and others suspended the Annual Reminders to marshal support for a 1970 march commemorating the first anniversary of Stonewall. Proceeding from Greenwich Village to Central Park, it is remembered as the first New York City Pride Parade.

During this period, feminism was flourishing. Caught in the middle, lesbians encountered discrimination in the women's liberation movement and misogyny in the gay rights movement. By the 1970s, tensions between lesbians and gay men were high. Many lesbians favored separatism—a direction never pursued by Gittings. Gittings and her partner felt their primary oppression resulted from negative attitudes toward homosexuality, not from their status as women. They believed the struggle for gay rights would be successful only with the unified effort of both genders.

Gittings and Kameny waged a multi-year campaign for the declassification of homosexuality as a mental disorder. In 1970 the Gay Liberation Front and Gay Activists Alliance demonstrated at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association (APA). The next year, Gittings, Kameny and fellow agitators stormed the meeting and Kameny seized the microphone, demanding to be heard. For the APA’s annual meeting in 1972, Kameny and Gittings organized a panel on homosexuality. Continue reading from LGBT50

From Our Collection

Link to We are Everywhere by Matthew Riemer in the Catalog
Link to The Gay Revolution by Lillian Faderman in the Catalog
Link to Great Speeches on Gay Rights edited by James Daley in freading
Link to Queer, There, and Everywhere by Sarah Prager in the Catalog
Link to The Stonewall Reader edited by Jason Baumann in the catalog
Link to Love and Resistance : Out of the Closet into the Stonewall Era edited by Jason Baumann in the catalog