The LGBT History of the Congresional Cemetery

LGBT History of the Congressional Cemetery

History comes to life in Congressional Cemetery.  The creak and clang of the wrought iron gate signal your arrival into the early decade of our national heritage.   Surrounding you are the men and women who shaped the new capital and gave substance to the new national – congress member and trade-workers, diplomats and domestic workers, explorers and architects, soldiers and musicians.

Congressional Cemetery, currently led by gay President Paul K. Williams, is believed to be the world’s only cemetery with a LGBT Section.  Although earlier LGBT burials are located in historic Congressional Cemetery, the LGBT corner began in 1988 with Leonard Matlovich.  In the 1980s and 1900s, when the AIDS crisis gripped the LGBT Community, HCC was one of the few cemeteries in the nation that would inter AIDS victims.  The cemetery’s policy of encouraging interesting, unique, and poignant headstones and inscriptions has led to efforts to educate future LGBT individuals of the struggles their forbears experiences.  The Congressional Cemetery is an active cemetery with many members of the LGBT community currently buying plots, and is the future site of the 501(c)(3) nonprofit LGBT Veterans Memorial.

Here are some of the many LGBT individuals remembered in this cemetery:

1. Cliff Anchor (1936-2000)

Born in Waterloo, England, Anchor immigrated to Canada at age 17 and changed his name to Michael Erickson.  He became a U.S. citizen in 1966.  In the early 1960s, Anchor moved to San Francisco to work in radio and began KRJB-FM radio in Monte Rio, CA, the first station in the country to air the National Gay Network News.  Anchor joined the California National Guard in 1973, reaching the rank of Lt. Colonel.  In 1979, he met his friend Leonard Matlovich and moved to Guerneville, CA.  Anchor joined the California National Guard in 1973, reaching the rank of Lt. Colonel.  In 1979, he met his friend Leonard Matlovich and moved to Guerneville, California.  Anchor came out and reclaimed his birth name in 1988.  He was an advocated for gay rights within the U.S. Military, worked with AVER and San Francisco’s gay Alexander Hamilton American Legion Post 448, and was featured in the books One Million Strong and Conduct Unbecoming.  While a memorial bench is placed in the Congressional Cemetery, it is not believed that Anchor’s remains are interred here.

2. Peter Doyle (1843-1907)

Peter Doyle, a veteran of the Confederate Army, is believed by historians to have been the greatest love of gay American poet Walt Whitman.  Doyle and Whitman met in Washington, D.C. on the horse-drawn streetcar for which Doyle was the conductor.  Doyle later recalled, “we were familiar at once – I put my hand on his knee – we understood.  He did not get out at the end of the trip – in fact he went all the way back with me.”

Doyle and Whitman exchanged several letters and postcards.  In his notebooks, Whitman referred to Doyle using the code “16.4” a reference to the numerical order of Doyle’s initials.  Whitman wrote in one letter to him, “I will imagine you with your arm around my neck saying Good night, Walte – & me – Good night, Pete.”

3. Ken Dresser (1938-1995)

Ken Dresser was considered by many to be one of the best large-scale graphic designers in the world.  He was best known for his work with Disney, including Spectromagic, the Main Street Electric Parade, and Epcot’s Electric Water Pageant.  Dresser also worked with Dennis Despie as part of the company Select Productions, which was involved with such events as presidential inaugurations and Super Bowl half-time shows.  Dresser event wrote an an episode of “Homocide” in 1973.

4. Charles Fowler (1931-1995)

Charles Fowler was an arts educator, writer, and director of National Cultural Resources.  He was a guest professor at several American universities and consistently urged teachers to experience their work with students as creative encounters: alive, inventive, and filled with mutual discovery.  Fowler served as editor of the Music Educators Journal from 1964 to 1971.  He donated his papers to the University of Maryland, stating “I was not satisfied as a teacher with merely passing on the culture.  I wanted a role in creating it.  The classroom is not just a place for learning about yesterday, but a laboratory for inventing tomorrow.”

5. John Frey (1929-1997) & Peter Morris (1929-2010)

John Frey and Peter Morris met at the piano bar/restaurant called the Chicken Hut on H Street near Lafayette Park, the then-most popular establishment for gay males, while students at Catholic University.  Frey was a Fulbright Scholar, a professor of Romance Languages at George Washington University, and author of books on Victor Hugo and Emile Zola.  Morris was an expert French cook and on the Board of Directors of the gay Catholic organization Dignity, for which he coauthored a community cookbook.  They utilized their monument for frequent picnics, and encouraged others to do so after their death.

6. Barbara Gittings (1932-2008) and Kay Tobin Lahusen (1930-)

Barbara Gittings and Kay Tobin Lahusen were partners in life and activism for 46 years.  Gittings was known as the mother of the modern gay rights movement for her tireless work that included founding the New York chapter of the Daughers of Bilitis, the first US lesbian rights organization, in 2958, editing its pioneering magazine, The Ladder, between 1963 and 1966, leading the first gay caucus of a national professional organization, the American Library Association, and creating the first widely distributed bibliography of gay-positive books, and helping convince the American Pschiatric Association that homosexuality was not a mental illness.  Together they participated in several of the earliest gay rights demonstrations, and were especially close to Frank Kameny as evidenced by inclusion of his famous slogan “Gay is Good” on their memorial bench.  Lahusen was the first out photojournalist, documenting many of those historic events, cofounded New York’s Gay Activist Alliance, wrote for a number of gay periodicals, and authored 1972’s The Gay Crusaders, the first book profiling movement leaders.

7. Henry A. Gordon (1947-1993)

Henry Gordon held a degree in sociology from The George Washington University, a master’s degree in sociology from the University of North Carolina, and a doctorate in the same discipline from the University of Maryland.  He worked for Radio Free Europe, spending a year as a public opinion researcher in Munich, for the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights from 1978 -1983 and for the U.S. Department of Education beginning in 1984 as a statistician in the department’s National Center for Education Statistics, where he worked with information regarding the Office of Civil Rights.  Gordon was a member of both the American Sociological Association and the Association of Applied Sociology.

8. Dandridge Featherston Hering (1924-2012)

Dandridge Featherston Hering graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1947 and subsequently served 20 years in the US Army.  He, along with his partner of 43 years, Joel Leenaars (1935-), was a member of one of San Francisco’s earliest gay rights groups, the Society for Individual Rights.  Hering and Leenaars were founding members of the earliest known gay boat club, San Francisco’s Barbary Coast Boating Club, and Hering was also a member of Service Academy Gay & Lesbian Alumni, and Knights Out, the association of gay West Point Graduates.

9. Franklin E. Kameny (1925-2011)

Franklin Kameny was known as the father of the modern gay rights movement.  Friend and fellow activist Kay Lahusen (#6) once said, “We all did a lot, but all roads led to Frank.  He was behind everything.”  in 1957, after his sexuality was discovered, Kameny was fired from his job at a US Army Map Service astronomer.  He became the first known gay person to legally fight his dismissal by the federal government when he appealed to the Supreme Court, which refused to review his case.  Kameny was a cofounder of the Mattachine Society of Washington, the Gay and Lesbian Activists Alliance, and the Gertrude Stein Democratic Club.  He led the first gay rights protests at the White House, Pentagon, State Department, Civil Service Commission, and Independence Hall, was the first openly gay congressional candidate, was involved in the declassification of homosexuality as a mental illness, and was involved in Leonard Matlovich’s case against the military ban on gay service members.  He often said he most wanted to be remembers for coining the then-unprecedented slogan “Gay is Good” in 1968; something many other gays then either did not believe themselves or were unwilling to publicly declare.

10. Leonard Matlovich (1943-1988) 

Leonard Matlovich was an Air Force Vietnam War veteran, and recipient of the Bronze Star and Purple Heart.  In 1975, the Technical Sergeant purposely outed himself to challenge the military’s banon gay service.  He became the first named gay person on the cover of a mainstream magazine, and the first living gay subject of a made-for-TV movie.  Though his lawsuit failed to end the ban, the court ordered his reinstatement in 1980 after the Air Force refused to explain why he should not be retained under a then-possible exception policy.  Knowing they would create another reason to discharge him, and having become a movement leader against Anita Bryant and others, he accepted a settlement instead.  In addition to beginning a national discussion on gay rights, his case resulted in a new Pentagon policy that those kicked out simply for being gay should receive an Honorable discharge, and inspired subsequent lawsuits and countless people to come out.  Before his death in 1988, he attempted to create a memorial to Harvey Milk in Historic Congressional Cemetery, forced Northwest Airlines to reverse its ban on passengers with AIDS, and was arrested in front of San Francisco’s Federal Building and the White House protesting the Reagan Administration’s response to AIDS.  He designed his gravestone as a memorial to all gay veterans, and its internationally known epitaph was repeatedly quoted in the long battle to end the ban.  His presence here led directly to others choosing Historic Congressional Cemetery, and his gravesite has been the site of numerous events in addition to ban protests including Veterans Day observances, the DC Front Runners Annual Pride Run, and the marriage of Gay Iraq veteran Stephen Snyder-Hill infamously “‘booed’ during a 2011 Republican presidential primary debate, and his partner Josh.

11. William Boyce Mueller (1942-1993)

William Boyce Mueller was a grandson of Boy Scouts of America founder William D. Boyce.  The Boy Scouts were infamous for their ban on gay scouts and leaders.  Mueller was involved in the 1991 founding of the Forgotten Scouts, the first lobby organization dedicated to ending the ban.  He said, “I don’t think my grandfather would have wanted me excluded from Scouting just because of my sexual orientation.  My grandfather would not have tolerated discrimination.  He founded the Boy Scouts for all boys, not just for some.  I realized that if people like me don’t take a stand, the world isn’t going to change.

12. Frank O’Reilly (1921-2001)

Frank O’Reilly was a World War II Veteran who held a Ph.D. in International Relations.  O’Reilly wrote as a music critic for The Washington Times, contributed to Musical America magazine and American Record Guide, and was a founder of the Charles Ives Centennial Festival and the American Chopin Foundation, the sponsor of an annual Chopin piano competition.    He once said, “During my eventfull lifeetime the only honest and truthful ending of the Pledge of Allegiance was “with Liberty and Justice for SOME.”

13. Thomas “Gator” Swann (1958-)

Thomas “Gator” Swann is a Marine Corps veteran who has worked for civil rights and political causes since 1972.  He is legally blind, due to AIDS, fought against the military’s “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell” policy and works for AIDS awareness.  Swann won a discrimination lawsuit against the US Navy that now protects gay civilian employees of the military and helped create the first memorial dedicated to LGBT veterans, located in Desert Memorial Park near Palm Springs, California.  On the 75th anniversary of the liberation of Dachau Nazi Concentration camp, he organized a wreath laying ceremony at Congressional Cemetery involving the military unit that liberated Dachau.  His nickname is based on his love for the University of Florida Gators.  A Roman Catholic, he was blessed by Pope John Paul II.  Swann is still living and is an LGBT Activist.

14. Emanuel “Butch” Ziegler (1951-2009)

Emanuel “Butch” Ziegler (1951-2009) worked as an elementary school teacher in Bel Air, MD for 12 years before joining his friend John Heikel as a co-owner of a teleprompting company, Capitol Prompting Service.  Thanks to Ziegler’s work ethic and ability to put clients at ease, he became of the most popular prompters in the nation.  The company has served Heads of State, major coproprations, and others in the Washington, DC metro area for over 30 years.

Job Opening at Wanda Alston

Wanda Alston Job Opening

The Wanda Alston is currently looking for a Case Manager.  The Case Manager provides youth-centered, trauma informed case management services for eight to twelve LGBTQ young adults ages 18-24, who live in Wanda Alston Foundation transitional living program. The Case Manger uses clinical skills to develop and track individual service plans/treatment plans for each resident addressing client needs i.e. connection to medical and mental health services, accessing public benefits/resources, budgeting, permanent and stable housing, etc. The Case Manager works with house staff to implement tasks, directives, and intervention to assist residents in meeting their treatment plan goals.

To learn more, please click the link below to download the job announcement.   If you are interested in this position, please send a cover letter and resume to: contactus@wandaalstonfoundation.org.

Case Manager Job Announcement

Happy Birthday Karl Frisch

Karl Frisch for School Board

Today is Karl Frisch’s birthday. Karl is turning 41, so I am joining many of his friends and supporters by donating $41 to support his campaign for School Board in Fairfax County, Virginia (Providence District).

I first met Karl Frisch many years ago working on a political campaign, and after so many years of working brilliantly on other people’s campaigns, I am excited to seeing him run for office himself.

As his partner Evan Ayars stated, “If Karl wins, he will be the first openly LGBTQ local elected official in Fairfax County history. But that isn’t why he is running. He will be a bold voice on the school board fighting for equity, equality, environmental sustainability, strong fiscal stewardship, and educational excellence for every student regardless of who they are or where they live.”

Please join me in celebrating Karl’s campaign by making your own $41 donation at:

https://secure.actblue.com/donate/kf-bday

Karl is not taking money from  corporate political action committees or special interests, which makes your support all the more important. Please donate what you can and join me in wishing Karl a Happy Birthday!

Southerners on New Ground Job Openings

Song Job

Southerners on new ground (SONG) is hiring to help support their ever growing work and our membership across the South. SONG is looking for looking for a Communications Fellow, Development Fellow, Operations Support and Facilities Support to join the team!

Southerners On New Ground (SONG) is a regional Queer Liberation organization made up of Black people, people of color, immigrants, undocumented people, people with disabilities, working class and rural and small town, LGBTQ people in the South.

You can find job descriptions and more information about how to apply in links below:

Development Fellow
Communications Fellow
Operations Support
Facilities Support

Health Resources for LGBTQ Veterans

Health Resources for LGBTQ Veterans

All Veterans are welcome at VA, even those who identify as a sexual or gender minority. Sexual and gender minority Veterans have faced stigma and discrimination, which can affect health. It is important that Veterans with LGBT and related identities know that they are welcome at VA.

Available Health Care Services

There is an LGBT VCC at every facility to help you get the care you need. Contact the LGBT VCC at your nearest facility.VA health care includes, among other services:

  • Hormone treatment
  • Substance use/alcohol treatment
  • Tobacco use treatment
  • Treatment and prevention of sexually transmitted infections/PrEP
  • Intimate partner violence reduction and treatment of after effects
  • Heart health
  • Cancer screening, prevention and treatment

Does my sexual orientation or gender identity matter to my health care?

As a result of stigma, stress, and discrimination, Veterans with LGBT and related identities face increased health risks and unique challenges in health care.

Learn about health risks and why you should talk to your provider about your sexual orientation identity, birth sex, and self-identified gender identity in the fact sheets below.

Questions

Why do you use the term “LGBT and related identities?”

Are there any providers specializing in transgender Veteran care in my area?

How do I get transition-related care at the VA?

Why are there resources being devoted to LGBT Veterans?

At the Crossroads of Islam and Homosexuality

At the crossroads of Islam and homosexuality

The following piece was written by a good friend who wants to remain anonymous for the time being. You may remember that a couple years back he wrote Young, Muslim, & Halfway Out of the Closet

Stop and think for a second about how many gay people you know. Now, of those people count on your hands how many would also call themselves Muslim? I would be surprised If you could hold more than one finger up. I am a gay cisgender man who comes from a Muslim background and I’m here to try to explain why we almost cease to exist in society.

I was born and raised in a fairly moderate Muslim household in the UK. I went to Arabic school every Saturday for the best part of a decade in an attempt to learn the language and hear the whimsical fables of the many prophets. As a child, I developed an irrational fear of death after hearing stories of heaven and hell foretold by my mother. This fear and the fact that I hadn’t yet developed critical thinking skills to question what I was doing meant I continued to keep up appearances of being faithful. Praying tended to feel more like a chore and I would rarely complete my ‘5 a day’.  With the hormones of puberty came my sexual awakening. Pornography was bittersweet at first as it came with a lot of guilt. However, as I began to tepidly explore my sexuality further through chatting to likeminded people on social media, the guilt waned whilst the questions arose.

In the summer before I started university I came out to my sisters and friends who all took it well and with the dawn of university came a number of different ‘sinful’ experiences including drinking – even if it was very weak cider. I had held out until university to be free and I didn’t even feel guilty anymore. I mean why should I feel guilty about being myself? At the freshers’ fair I remember sheepishly signing up to the LGBT+ society after the guy on the stand spotted that glimmer in my eye and I’m proud to say that 2 years on I have represented my society as the BAME representative, despite not being out to my parents!

Homosexuality in Islam is very much still a taboo subject, we are elephants in the room, seen but not heard. This is why I wanted to take on the role to provide us, and other queer people of colour with a voice – think ‘The Little Mermaid’. Since, the subject is rarely discussed, many backwards beliefs remain. For example, many including my father still believe it is a ‘choice’ and you are allowed to be gay as long as you’re essentially celibate your whole life – because we all want to be monks right? In some Muslim countries you can be killed for ‘practising’ your sexuality and honour killings within British Asian communities are not uncommon. This fear has driven an increase in marriages of convenience between gay men and women or arranged marriages where the spouse is being deceived in plain sight.

Our university recently had its annual ‘Islam awareness week’ where the Islamic society held a marquee on campus containing a myriad of information about the religion, beautiful Arabic calligraphy and free samosas. Anyone would be a fool not to at least be curious. The more I have discovered my sexuality, the more I have lost touch with my faith so stepping into this space felt strange yet familiar. After exchanging my coupon for some free food I sat down and began chatting with some friendly hijabi girls. I surprised myself as I began to open up to them about why I had lost faith. None of them reacted badly to my confession and I left questioning whether I was doing the right thing again. However, ultimately they retorted the same celibacy spiel that airs from the mouths of the majority of imams (mosque leaders) in this country.

There is also a severe lack of media representation when it comes to queer Muslims. Once in a blue moon there will be a low-profile documentary putting us under the microscope but this can lead people to believe that we are just that, a microscopic problem that is hidden away. Putting us side by side with major characters in films, books and television is how we can truly become visible as invisibility in popular culture means invisibility in real life.

At the start of the year the roles reversed and I became the guy on the LGBT stand at the freshers fair seeking out shy baby gays. One of them being a wee Scottish girl who told me she, ‘can either be a proud, out lesbian or a happy Pakistani Muslim girl but cannot ever be both’. Over the year I have watched this once timid girl disprove her own beliefs by discovering the pride in her sexuality whilst maintaining her religious sobriety in gay clubs and she has now succeeded my role as BAME and Faith and Belief rep for the LGBT+ society. If a girl who struggles to make 5 foot can make herself seen, so can you! If you ever want to see you parents smile rather than tut when a gay couple comes on ‘First Dates’ you have to show yourself. It will not be easy but change in them will only come from a change within you…

Be brave,

from someone like you.

Judge Preliminarily Green-Lights Lawsuit Against Conversion Therapy Ban

Florida GLBT Equality

Equality Florida Press Release — This week a Florida federal Magistrate Judge recommended that the City of Tampa be barred from enforcing part of its Conversion Therapy Ban Ordinance during a pending legal challenge. The federal Magistrate Judge also recommended that the case could proceed on limited grounds while recommending other claims should be dismissed. There is no timeline for the federal District Court Judge to act on the Magistrate Judge’s recommendations.

The City of Tampa is one of twenty local governments in Florida that has banned so-called “conversion therapy” on minors. Conversion therapy, a widely debunked practice, seeks to change a person’s sexual orientation or gender identity. Nearly every mainstream​ ​medical and mental health association has spoken against this practice. Previously, the federal Ninth and Third Circuit courts have refused to block conversion therapy bans.

“The fact remains that LGBTQ minors are at risk of fraudulent and dangerous so-called ‘conversion therapy,’” said Equality Florida Public Policy Director Jon Harris Maurer. “This lawsuit is being driven by Liberty Counsel, the same far-right extremists who recently attacked a bipartisan, anti-lynching bill that unanimously passed in the U.S. Senate just because it includes LGBTQ people. Equality Florida will not be deterred from protecting LGBTQ youth, and we applaud the City of Tampa’s leadership for taking a stand to do the same.”

Jose Vega, a Floridian who endured almost six years of conversion therapy, responded to the news:

“As a conversion therapy survivor, I know just how critical it is to protect minors from this dangerous practice. Conversion therapy is life-altering. It almost shattered my life. We cannot allow anti-LGBTQ forces to roll back the progress we have made in protecting young people from the horrors of conversion therapy.”

For more information, visit www.eqfl.org.