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"A Complete Alternative Sexuality History Timeline"
(This file is a work in progress and is updated every time we
get new information)
BC:
-
Ca. 50's 00 BC:
Creation of rock drawings at Ti-n-Lalan, near Fezzan in
Libya, showing an animal headed creature with a gigantic
penis, and an animal/man hybrid, having sex.
-
Ca. 2500 BC:
Gilgamesh, King of Uruk, in the Sumerian poem cycles that constitute
one of the oldest known pieces of literature, meets Enkidu, the
only man who rivals him for strength and bravery. They become
lovers and particularly enjoy wrestling with each other.
-
2355 - 2261 BC:
The reign of Egyptian King Pepy II Neferkare who, in what may
be history's first homosexual short story, makes nocturnal
visits to have sex with his general, Sisinne.
-
Ca. 1900 BC:
Destruction of the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah. Too bad
the bible is not more explicit about the reason. The
interpretation hinges on the Hebrew word meaning "to
know." The term is used 943 times in the Old Testament;
only 15 of these times is it a euphemism for sexual activity.
In the New Testament, the only reference to Sodom (Luke 10:10)
identifies the sin as inhospitality. The story of Sodom and
Gomorrah probably had nothing to do with sexuality. [AA]
-
1503-1354 BC:
The reign of Egyptian Queen Hatshepsut who adopted male
dress and even wore a false beard.
-
Ca. 1250 BC:
The Ani Papyrus shows the rite of the "animation of
the phallus." It appears to be one of the earliest
recorded examples of a blow job.
-
Ca. 1000 BC:
The Israelite king Saul demands of David, as a bride-price
for his daughter Michal, 100 Philistine foreskins.
-
Ca. 730 BC:
"Krimon warms the heart of Simias" is one of
several lines of homosexual graffiti that constitute one
of the earliest know uses of the Greek alphabet. [AA]
-
7th Century BC:
Ashurbanipal, the last Assyrian king, dresses in women's
clothing most of the time. The cross-dressing is used to
justify his eventual overthrow. [TOL]
-
600 BC:
After this date it becomes customary for Greek hoplites,
the upper class warriors who fight in the phalanx, each
to take a boy of 12 as a lover to train until he is 18
and can hunt and fight. In Crete a ritual kidnapping
consecrates the pairing.
-
580's BC:
Sappho's famed girls' school flourishes on the isle of
Lesbos. Her ezusite love poems to students are the earliest
known lesbian writings. [AA]
-
Ca. 540 BC:
The Etruscan Tomb of the Bulls at Tarquinia, with its fresco
depicting one man anally penetrating another.
-
418 BC, Dec 25:
Birth of Epaminondas, one of the great military geniuses
of the ancient world. Like other Greek warriors he loved
boys, but for him delight in boys was complete, he never
married or produced an heir. His two favorite boys fell in
battle and, by his order, were buried with him in his tomb.
[Greif 82]
-
382 BC, April 18:
Birth of Philip II of Macedon, father of Alexander the Great.
In 350 BC he leaves on a military expedition, taking with him
800 boys to be used for the pleasure of himself and his officers.
-
378 BC:
The Sacred Band of Thebes is formed. This military unit
consists entirely of 150 male couples and is based upon
the belief that men fighting alongside their lovers would
die rather than shame one another. [TOL]
-
356 BC, July 20:
The birth of Alexander of Macedonia—known to history as
Alexander the Great—king, general, world conqueror, and
lover of men, particularly Hephaiston, whose death in 324
he mourns extravagantly, and the eunuch slave boy Bagoas,
who had been a favorite of Persian king Darius.
-
338 BC:
The Sacred Band of Thebes is annihilated by Philip of
Macedon and his son Alexander at the Battle of Chaeronea.
The 300 stood their ground and perished.
-
333 BC:
Alexander of Macedonia begins his campaign to conquer the
Persian Empire, and takes Egypt and much of Asia before
turning back in central India.
-
324 BC:
The death of Hephaiston, lover of Alexander the Great.[G30]
-
323 BC, June 10:
Death of Alexander the Great.
-
300 BC:
Addeaus of Macedon is quoted as saying, "When you
meet a boy who pleases take action at once. Don't be
polite, just grab him by the balls and strike while the
iron is hot."
-
186 BC:
The Roman Senate attempts to suppress the Bacchanalian
rites in which, according to the historian Livy, there
is more debauchery among the men with each other than
with the women.
-
100 BC, July 13:
Birth of Gaius Julius Caesar in Rome. "Wife to
every man and husband to every woman." [Greif 82]
-
71 BC:
Revolt of Roman slaves, led by Spartacus. The revolution
is crushed by consuls Pompey and Crassus and the slaves
are crucified along the Appian Way.
-
10 BC, Aug 1:
Birth of Claudius, Emperor of Rome. Robert Graves? novels,
and Masterpiece Theatre's production of I Claudius enlightened
us, but not about Emperor Claudius? contributions to the
gladiatorial games or of his male lovers.
-
1 BC:
Publication of Ovid's Ars Amatoria, the first self-help
sex manual.
1 - 999AD
-
12 AD, Aug 31:
birth of the future Roman emperor, Caligula
-
26 AD:
The Roman Emperor Tiberius (born Nov 16, 42 BC) retires to
Capri, where he indulges in all forms of sexual exploration.
-
39 AD, Sept 4:
birth of the future Roman Emperor, Titus. He was not a
Tiberius or Caligula or Nero, or even a Claudius. But he
did complete the coliseum, the site of some of the bloodiest
activities yet to come in Roman history.
-
41 AD, Jan 21:
Roman Emperor Caligula killed by a guard who had been
frequently forced to kiss the royal middle finger in public,
and other things in private. (Birth Aug 31, 12 AD) [Greif 82]
-
45-68 AD:
Reign of Nero (born Dec 15, 37 BC), who as Emperor of Rome,
would elevate torture to new heights as a spectator sport.
-
53 AD, Sept 15:
Birth of Marcus Ulpius Trajanus, who became the Roman
Emperor Trajan, the first non-Italian emperor. His
accomplishments were many, not only in battle, but in
the construction of public works. All of the ancient
sources discuss Trajan's homosexuality candidly, differing
only in the stories used to illustrate his sexual preferences.
[Greif 82]
-
69 AD, April 15:
The Roman Emperor Otho (Marcus Salvius Otho), who literally
rose to power on his knees before Nero, stabs himself in the
heart...
-
76 AD, Jan 24:
Birth of Hadrian, who would become Emperor of Rome and lover
of the beautiful Antinous (July 16 c.110) who drowned himself
in the Nile at age 21, perhaps in as a self sacrifice to save
the life of his lover and master.
-
79 AD, Aug 24:
Vesuvius erupts, thereby preserving the homoerotic, and other
sexually explicit, wall murals that would surely have been
destroyed by later Christian "civilizations".
-
188 AD, April 4:
Birth of the Roman Emperor Caracalla. Gay -- but not leather,
he certainly set the standard for a bath house! [Greif 82]
-
3rd century AD:
Sebastian, a handsome young Roman Centurion is beloved by
the emperor Diocletian, who turned against him when he
embraces Christianity. He was stripped and tied to a tree
and shot full of arrows by his fellow centurions. But he
survives only to die many years later in a second martyrdom
when he is stoned to death. St. Sebastian has been called
the patron saint of gays, and the patron saint of SM.
-
205, March 8:
Birth of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus, who would become
Heliogabalus, the boy Emperor of Rome. Blatantly homosexual
he was married twice in one night choosing a well hung
charioteer as his husband and a boy named Hierocles as his
wife. He sent out his agents to round up the men with the
largest penises in the Roman empire. Eventually his own
guards shoved a sword up his ass and dumped him in a sewer.
He was 17. [Greif 82]
-
342 AD:
The emperors Constantius and Constans, having inherited much
of the empire of their father Constantine, call for "exquisite
punishment" for homosexuality. [AA]
-
390 AD:
The Roman Emperor Theodosius sets the punishment for
homosexuality as death by burning.
-
533 AD:
Byzantine Emperor Justinian I, decrees that homosexuality
and blasphemy are equally to blame for famines, earthquakes,
and pestilence. He orders castration for offenders. [AA]
-
693 AD:
The Council of Toledo declares that "sodomists"
have infiltrated the Church and order that clerics who lay
with men should be degraded, exiled, and damned.
-
809-813:
Reign of Abbasid Caliph Al-Amin of Baghdad, whose mother
becomes dismayed by his preference for male eunuchs and
packs his court with girls disguised as boys. These
"ghulamiyyat" then become a fashion in many
Moslem courts.
-
955-964:
Reign of Pope John XII who loves both boys and muscular
young men, he dies at the age of 26 from a stroke while
having sex with one of his beautiful young men.
1000 - 1499
-
1032 - 1044:
Reign of Pope Benedict IX, who has been called the
Christian incarnation of Elagabalus.
-
1106, Sept 28:
Robert II, gay son of William the Conqueror is captured
in battle and imprisoned for the rest of his life.
-
1073:
All known copies of Sappho's lesbian love poems are
burned by ecclesiastical authorities in Constantinople
and Rome. [AA]
-
1076:
Archbishop Lanfranc in England orders a priest's
benediction on a marriage, but for another 100 years
poor people continue to marry without benefit of clergy.
-
1157, Sept 8:
Birth of Richard Plantagenet, Richard Lion Heart,
Richard I, King of England and Duke of Aquitaine. His
lover for many years was Philip, King of France. He was
one of the era's most widely respected generals. But he
produced no heirs and eventually his loathsome brother
John ascended to the British throne. The result was the
Magna Carta.
-
1210 - 1215:
The Council of Paris declares sodomy to be a capital
offense. This marked the start of a militant anti-sodomy
campaign by the Catholic Church. [AA]
-
1252:
St. Thomas Aquinas begins his theological teaching. He
declares that God created sex organs exclusively for
reproduction; homosexual acts were thus "unnatural"
and heretical. [AA]
-
ca. 1260:
The Legal school of Orleans orders that women found
guilty of lesbian acts have their clitoris removed for
the first offense; that they be further mutilated for a
second offense; and burned at the stake for a third.
-
1268, Oct 29:
Frederick of Baden, Duke of Austria, willingly joins
his condemned lover, 16 year old Conradin of Sicily, the
last legitimate Hohenstaufen (Born March 24, 1252), and
they are buried alive together. [Greif 82]
-
1292:
Europe's first known execution for sodomy takes place
in Ghent. [AA]
-
1307, Oct 13:
Philip IV of France orders the arrest of all members
of the Knights Templar. In the following years hundreds
of Templars are imprisoned, tortured, and/or burned because
of their supposed toleration as sinless of "acts against
nature."
-
1310, Oct 12:
The Knights Templar are put on trial for heresy in
France. Most recant the confessions made under torture,
expecting pardon from and Pope Clement V, which is not
granted. The French crown, and the church, thus gain
control of the order's great wealth.
-
1323:
In one of the earliest recorded trials for sodomy,
Arnold of Verniolle is found guilty and sentenced to
life imprisonment with a diet of bread and water. Despite
stiff church prohibitions against sodomy, the trial
record shows that Arnold had little trouble finding
sex partners. [AA]
-
1326:
Hugh le Despenser the younger, the second lover of
Edward II of England, is hung, after his genitals have
been cut off and burned before his eyes, upon the order
of Edward's wife, Isabella, and her lover, Roger
Mortimer. [Greif 82]
-
1327:
Edward II of England is murdered by the insertion
of a red hot poker into his rectum. (birth April 25,
1284) [Greif 82]
-
1350:
Welsh poet Daffyd ap Gwilym produces explicit ballads
like "The Penis" and "Deer Copulating"
-
1373, Sept, 28:
Birth of the painter Caravaggio, whose short, violent
life encompassed drinking, brawling, murder &
sodomy. [Greif 82]
-
1431, May 30:
Birth of Joan of Arc, at Rouen, France. She led the
French armies against the British invaders and won
battle after battle. Then she was captured by the
British in Normandy and condemned to be burned at
the stake because she refused to stop wearing men's
clothing. Abandoned by most of the French, her friend
Gilles de Rais tried to rescue her but was too late.
-
1440, Oct 26:
Gilles de Rais, best friend of Joan of Arc, is
executed in Nantes, France, for the torture and
murder of hundreds of children. (born Jan 10, 1404)
-
1450-1453:
Pope Nicholas empowers the Spanish Inquisition to
investigate and punish homosexuality. [AA]
-
1464:
Pope Paul II elected to office. Like John XII he died
while having sex, but the cause of his death was
strangulation.
-
1469, May 3:
Birth of Niccolo Machiavelli, Italian political
philosopher. The Prince is a masterwork of mind
control. [Greif 82]
-
1471-1484:
Reign of Pope Sixtus IV. His reign is purchased by
his lover Pietro Riario who runs the church, including
the Spanish Inquisition, until his death in 1474. After
that time Sixtus entertains himself by having muscular
young men strip and fight to the death, the survivor
becoming his bed partner. When Sixtus was ill his
physicians prescribe mother's milk, the pope suggests
that the juice of young men would suit him better.
-
1474:
A Rooster is burned at the stake for "the heinous
and unnatural crime of laying an egg".
-
1475, March 6:
Birth of Michelangelo Buonarroti, (death 1564) Italian
sculptor, painter and poet. Not a Leatherman himself but
certainly gay. And where would we be without his David to
become, among other things, FeBe's logo, and his wrestlers
in a 69 of testicle torture!
-
ca. 1480:
Pico of Mirandola in "Against the Astrologists",
describes a male acquaintance who is sexually excited by
being whipped before sex. This is the first known case
history of a masochist. [wd]
-
1494:
Christopher Columbus's physician on his second voyage
to the new world, wrote that the behavior of the natives
was, "Detestable! Nauseating! Disgusting!" It
was common practice among these Carib tribes to castrate
boys captured from enemy villages and keep them as lovers
until they were eighteen, then they were killed and
eaten.
1500 - 1599
-
1500's:
Elena de Cespedes, a Spanish woman who lived as a man
and married a woman, is discovered and immolated.
-
1513:
Balboa, while exploring what is now Panama described
homosexual activities among the natives he witnessed
as "Abominable". He threw 40 of the offenders
to his dogs. [AA]
-
1520, June 30:
Inca Emperor Montezuma II dies at Tenochtitlan, Mexico.
He is know to have cannibalized the boys he sodomized.
[Greif 82]
-
1526:
A Spanish historian wrote that Carib men also had
lovers that they did not intend to smother in butter
and spices. These lovers were distinguished by wearing
"naguas" or short skirts and jewelry their
lovers had given them.
-
1530:
In an Inca town in northern Peru, shortly after being
conquered by the Spanish, there were fifteen women for
every man, the men had been burned for suspected homosexual
activities. By 1580 the area was still known for its gay
activity.
-
1533:
The "buggery" law is passed in England
decreeing a penalty of death. This is the first time
the offense is covered under civil, rather than church,
law. [AA]
-
1541:
The birth of the painter El Greco (death 1614) "His
men are martyrs or conquerors; in their gaunt visages he
traces the weariness and the final exhaustion of the body
in surrendering to the mystical vision, or the savage
meditation of those entrusted with the flagellation of
Heretics."
-
1550 - 1555:
Reign of Pope Julius III who, upon election as Pope,
made his 17 year old lover a member of the College of
Cardinals, and also appointed him Secretary of State.
His orgies with teenage Cardinals were common knowledge.
Most were horrified but the Archbishop of Benevento wrote
a book, In Praise of Sodomy, dedicated to the pope.
-
1551, Sept 19:
Birth of Henri III, King of France. In the final years of
his reign (he died at 37) he surrounded himself with
handsome young men and abandoned himself to hedonistic
joys. He took particular delight in flogging the backs
of penitents marching in holy procession. [Greif 82]
-
1563:
The Roman Catholic council of Trent concludes that sex
is bad and denounces "paintings calculated to excite
lust." Pope Paul IV has clothes painted onto the naked
figures in Michelangelo's painting, Last Judgment, in the
Sistine Chapel.
-
1564, Feb 26:
Birth of English playwright Christopher Marlowe. "All
they that love not tobacco and boys are fools."
[Greif 82]
-
1570's:
Rome - Montaigne reports that at the Church of St. John,
Catholic priests perform same sex marriages. A contemporary
historian reports that same sex couples married in St.
John's are burned in the city square.
-
1576:
Brazil - Spanish explorers report that some native women
"give up all duties of women and imitate men... Each
has a woman to serve her, to whom she says she is married,
and they treat each other and speak with each other as
man and wife."
-
1580, April 1:
The Netherlands: Civil Marriage is first established.
-
1583:
The Third Provincial Council of Lima, in Peru, tells
natives that "sodomy whether with another man,
or with a boy, or a beast... carries the death penalty,...
and the reason God has allowed that you should be so
afflicted and vexed by other nations is because of this
vice that your ancestors had and many of you still
have." [AA]
-
1585:
In one of the earliest recorded cases of masochism,
Sister Mary Magdalene de Pazzi begs other nuns to tie
her up and hurl hot wax at her. She also made a novice
at the convent thrash her. [AA]
-
1590:
In "Lectiones antique" Ludovicus Caelius
Rhodiginus describes a man who needs to be whipped
to have an erection. [wd]
1600-1699
-
1600, March 18:
Fourteen year old Catalan de Erauso escapes from a
Basque convent then goes on to serve in the Spanish
army dressed as a man. In 1620 the Pope gives permission
for her to continue to dress in men's clothing.
-
1602, July 6:
birth of Jerome Duquesnoy in Brussels Belgium, The eminent
sculptor was working on projects at the cathedral of St.
Bavon in Ghent when he was arrested for sodomy with two
acolytes of the church who had served as his models. He
was strangled and then burned at the stake. [Greif 82]
-
1610:
The Virginia Colony passes the New World's first sodomy
law, decreeing the penalty of death for offenders. [AA]
-
1611, July 27:
Birth of Murad IV, Sultan of Turkey. His name was
synonymous with cruelty, torture and unspeakable horror.
His reign was bloody, and the armless, legless, tongueless
victims of his tyranny numerous. [Greif 82]
-
1619:
Virginia - The first slaves are brought to North America.
Quaker John Woolman later notes that despite their not being
allowed legal marriage, "Negroes marry after their
own way."
-
1624:
Richard Cornish of the Virginia Colony is tried and hanged
for sodomy. He is the first person in America known to be
convicted of this offense. [AA]
-
1624 - 1653:
The rule of Nzinga as King of Angola, this female to male
cross dresser fought and won many battles against the
Portuguese army.
-
1625, Feb 7:
In Virginia Thomas Hatch is sentenced to a whipping,
the loss of one ear, and seven years of servitude, for
daring to speak against the execution of a man for the
crime of buggery.
-
1631:
Mervyn Touchet, the Earl of Castlehaven, is put on trial
for sodomy. He is found guilty and beheaded. [AA]
-
1631:
Rembrandt sells rude etchings, thought to be of his wife
pissing.
-
1638:
Massachusetts orders every town to "dispose of all
single persons." In Connecticut, bachelors are taxed
20 shillings a week.
-
1639:
The German doctor Johann Heinrich Meibom describes the
sexual excitement of some men when whipped in De usu
flagrorum. He reasons that this is because the sperm
fluid in the kidneys is heated by whipping and then
descends to the testicles. Variations on this theory
will dominate the thinking on SM until the 19th century. [wd]
-
1641-42:
The Massachusetts Bay Colony incorporates the language
of Leviticus 20:13 into it's laws. Other New England
colonies soon follow suit. [AA]
-
1649:
Sarah White Norman and Mary Vincent Hammon are charged
with "lewd behavior each with other upon a bed"
in Plymouth MA. Charges against Hammon are dropped, but
Norman is convicted and has to make a public confession.
She is the first woman in America know to be convicted of
lesbian activity. [AA]
-
1644, April 10:
Birth of John Wilmot, later Earl of Rochester, British
writer. His poetry extols the joys of every possible
type of human coupling.
-
1654:
Execution of Jerome Duquesnoy (born 1602), court sculptor
of Flanders. he is found guilty of sodomy with two church
acolytes who had served as his models, strangled and
burned at the stake. His brother, Francois, also a
sculptor, created Brussels' famous Pissing Boy fountain.
-
1655:
The colony of New Haven expands its definition of sodomy
- a capital offense - to include sexual relations between
women. [AA]
-
1659:
In France, by Royal decree, secret marriages and abductions
are summarily abolished.
-
1661:
In New England, the first Colonial divorce. Massachusetts
averages one a year until 1760.
-
1661 - 1750:
All the Southern colonies, Massachusetts, and Pennsylvania
pass laws prohibiting interracial sex and marriage.
-
1662-1723:
The reign of Emperor Kang Xi, who first took steps to
prohibit consensual homosexuality in China.
-
1677:
Using the newly invented microscope, Dutch researchers
Leeuwenhoek and Ham observe human sperm for the first
time. [wd]
-
1681:
The young Count de Vermandois, the son of Louis XIV of
France by Louise de La Valliere, applies for admission
to a secret fraternity of homosexuals active, but underground,
in the French Court. Because the young count is so indiscreet
in his activities, his father discovers his orientation, and
the existence of the fraternity. Louis has his son whipped
in his presence and then exiles him.
-
1694:
First mention of the Cerne Abbas Giant, a huge chalk
drawing on the side of a hill near Dorchester, England.
The naked giant with club and erect phallus is supposedly
prehistoric. But why was it not noticed until now? Some
suspect a 17th Century hoax designed to annoy the Puritans.
-
1694, Nov 21:
Birth of Francois Marie Arouet, better known as the
French philosopher/writer Voltaire. He once ended a
letter to a male friend, "I kiss your rod."
Should we consider Candide a masochist?
-
1698:
Kristian Franz Paullini confirms Meibom's theory in
Flagellum salutis, but claims that blood is warmed by
whipping, which then excites the sperms in the testicles. [wd]
1700 - 1799
-
1700's:
In the Prussian state of Uuerttemburg, cripples and
blind persons are not permitted to marry.
-
1712, June 28:
Birth of Jean Jacques Rousseau (death July 2, 1778).
By his own reports, except for one relationship, the
artist was a lifelong unfulfilled masochist, dating
from a school spanking when he was 11. In one affair,
he had a Mistress who dominated him thoroughly, but
even she refused to re-enact his much desired spanking. [JWB]
-
1720:
Anne Bonney and Mary Read, partners who dressed as men
and sailed the seas are tried for Piracy.
-
1730, Sept 17:
Birth of Baron Freidrich von Steuben, aid to Frederick
the Great, who was in charge of training the Prussian
army until there were objections to "indecent
liberties" with young men. He then offers his
services to the Continental Army in America and joins
Washington at Valley Forge. There he organizes and
disciplines the men into a powerful striking force.
When he retires he adopts two handsome young men to
become his heirs, and he probably continues to train
and discipline them. [Greif 82]
-
1730, Nov 6:
The future Frederick the Great of Prussia, 18, (born
Jan 24, 1712) is forced by his father to watch the
torture and beheading of his lover, Lt. Hans Hermann
von Katte, after the two of them were caught trying
to run away together. Later as king, on learning that
a particularly well-endowed soldier had been arrested
for "bestiality with his horse," he is
reputed to have replied, "Fool -- don't put
him in irons; put him in the infantry."
-
1730-31:
Authorities announce the discovery of an extensive
homosexual network in Amsterdam. Three hundred prosecutions
resulted and 70 people, including boys as young as 14,
were executed. [AA]
-
1740, June 2:
the Birth of the Marquis de Sade. [Greif 82]
-
1740:
China's first sodomy laws are enacted by Manchu Qing
regime, which outlaws male homosexuality. [AA]
-
1749:
Publication of Fanny Hill, by John Cleland. The novel
about a London prostitute is immediately suppressed,
but it has enjoyed enormous popularity for more than
two centuries.
-
1749, Jan 29:
Birth of King Christian VII of Denmark, whose physician
assigned him a sadistic male lover who beat him
regularly. [Greif 82]
-
1753, Sept 20:
Birth of Tippu Sahib, the last maharajah of Mysore,
who spends his life resisting British designs on India.
The "Tiger of Mysore" demonstrates his feelings
for the British by personally supervising the gang rape
of each captured soldier. [Greif 82]
-
1753, Oct 18:
Birth of Jean Jaczues Regis de Cambaceres in France.
Under Napoleon he became the primary architect of the
Napoleonic Code. He was discreet, but not secretive,
about his homosexuality and it was through his influence
that the Napoleonic Code, and many later laws based
upon it, legalized private consenting homosexual acts
between adults. (died: Mar. 8, 1824)
-
1754, Sept 9:
Birth of William Bligh, later to become renowned as
Captain of H.M.S. Bounty. He survived the mutiny and
the long voyage in an open boat, while all of the
mutineers perished on Pitcairn Island. And he
certainly knew how to have a man flogged!
-
1755, Sept 4:
Birth of Hans Axel, Count von Fersen, in Stockholm
Sweden. General, Statesmen, and lover of three different
Swedish kings. The reason for his horrible death has never
been satisfactorily explained. A savage mob tore him to
pieces in the streets of Stockholm as police looked on
and did nothing. He had been beaten with canes and
umbrellas and then kicked to death. [Greif 82]
-
1758, May 6:
Birth of Francois de Robespierre, a leader of the French
revolution, he led in sending many of the nobility, and
their supporters, to the torture chambers, and to the
guillotine. He ended up there himself.
-
1763, Oct 29:
By order of the King of France, the Marquis de Sade is
committed to Vincennes fortress for excesses committed
in a brothel which he has been frequenting for a month.
-
1768, Apr 3:
On Easter Sunday, at about nine o'clock in the morning
The Marquis de Sade accosts Rose Keller, she accompanies
Sade in a cab to Arcueil. There, in his rented cottage,
he orders her to undress, threatens her with a knife,
and flogs her.
-
1772, Sept 3:
Verdict: The Marquis de Sade, and his man servant Latour,
are found guilty. The former of crimes of poisoning and
sodomy, and the latter of the crime of sodomy, and are
condemned to expiate their crimes at the cathedral porch
before being taken to the Place Saint-Louis "for
the said Sade to be decapitated... and the said Latour
to be hanged by the neck and strangled... then the body
of the said Sade and that of the said Latour to be
burned and their ashes strewn to the wind." On
Sept 12 Sade and Latour are executed in effigy on the
Place des Precheurs, in Aix.
-
1775, July 9:
Birth of Matthew Gregory "Monk" Lewis in London.
A master at writing the silly, overripe 18th Century
Gothic romance novels that are still fun to read. In
his Ambrosio, or the Monk (1795) Ambrosio is seduced
by a woman driven to blind nymphomania by demons, who
enters the monastery and Ambrosios's bed disguised as
a boy. His sins are found out and he is tortured by
the Inquisition, sentenced to death, and bargains with
the Devil, who destroys him. [Greif 82]
-
1776, Jan 17:
M. Trillet comes to La Coste to claim his daughter, who
is known in the chateau as Justine. During an argument
with the Marquis de Sade, Trillet fires a pistol shot
at him almost point blank, but misses. He runs off to
the La Coste township where he babbles about what has
happened. Later Catherine (aka Justine) sends someone
to find her father, who returns to the chateau. Here
she tries to calm him but Trillet, who has brought four
other men back with him, flies into another rage and
fires a second shot into a courtyard where he thinks
Sade to be. All five men then flee.
-
1776, Feb 13:
The Marquis de Sade is arrested by inspector Marais
at the Hotel de Danemark, on the rue Jacob and taken
to Vincennes fortress where, at 9:30 that night, he
is formally entered as a prisoner.
-
1776, April 18:
In a letter from the Marquis de Sade to his wife:
"I am in a tower closed in by nineteen iron doors,
with light reaching me only through two little windows,
each with a score of iron bars." He complains that
in over the two months he has been in prison he has been
allowed only five walks of one hour each, "in a sort
of tomb about forty feet square surrounded by walls more
than fifty feet high."
-
1776, Sept 7:
After winning a trial, and escaping from authorities,
the Marquis de Sade is again incarcerated at Vincennes
prison.
-
1778, March 10:
Lt. F. G. Enslin is drummed out of the Continental Army
for "attempting to commit sodomy with J. Monhart,
a soldier."
-
1780's:
In the United States, colonial laws become state
constitutions. Bigamy is prohibited, the marriage
of a lunatic is void, and age requirements are set.
Marriages can be annulled for impotence and blood
relations.
-
1782, July 12:
The Marquis de Sade completes the manuscript of his
"Dialogue between a Priest and a Dying Man".
-
1784, Feb 29:
The Marquis de Sade is transferred from the Vincennes
prison to the Bastille.
-
1785:
The Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue includes
the phrase "gentlemen of the back door" as
a slang term for gay men.
-
1785, Oct 22:
The Marquis de Sade begins the final revision of his
draft of a major work "The 120 Days of Sodom"
or " The School for Libertines".
-
1788:
The French doctor Francois Amedee Doppet confirms
Meibom and Paullini's theory. He expands it by pointing
out that women always have warm vaginas after whipping.
At the end of his article Das Beisseln und sein Auswirkunauf
den Geschlechtstrieb he gives safety tips for flagellants.
This is the first known SM safety text! [wd]
-
1788, Mar. 1:
The Marquis de Sade begins work on his short novel Eugenie
de Franval, which he completes in six days.
-
1789, July 2:
The Bastille logbook notes that "The Count de
Sade shouted several times from the window of the
Bastille that the prisoners were being slaughtered
and that the people should come to liberate them."
-
1789, July 4:
At 1:00 AM, as a result of a report made to Lord de
Villedeuil on the Marquis de Sade's conduct on July
2, he is transferred to Charenton Asylum by Inspector
Quidor.
-
1789, July 14:
The Bastille is stormed and the Marquis de Sade's cell
is sacked. His furniture, his suites, linen, his library
and most important, his manuscripts are "burned,
pillaged, torn up and carried off."
-
1790, Apr 2:
de Sade is released from Charenton Asylum.
-
1791:
Justine by the Marquis de Sade (1740-1841) is first
published in France.
-
1791, Oct 22:
First performance at the Theatre Moliere of Sade's Le
Comte Oxtiern ou les effets du libertinage. A second
performance occurs two weeks later which gives rise
to a disturbance and causes Sade to suspend further
performances.
-
1792:
Civil marriage is established after the revolution
in France.
-
1794:
Prussia becomes the first German state to abolish the
death penalty for homosexuality (which had been in
effect since 1532), and replace it with flogging
and imprisonment.
1800 - 1849
-
1800's:
in Washington DC, We'wha, a two-spirit leader and representative
for the Native American Zuni tribe, is married to a man.
-
1801, March 6:
Sade and his publisher, Nicolas Masse, are arrested. Police
searches find manuscripts and printed works, including
Juliette and La Nouvelle Justine and a tapestry depicting
"the most obscene subjects, most of which were drawn
from the infamous novel Justine."
-
1801, April 2:
The Minister of Police decides that a "trial would
cause too much of a scandal which an exemplary punishment
would still not make worthwhile" So de Sade is
"placed" in Sainte-Pelagie prison as
"administrative punishment" for being the
author of "that infamous novel Justine" and
of that "still more terrible work Juliette."
-
1805:
Publication of Ein Jahr in Arkadien (A Year in Arcadia),
by Herzog August von Sachsen Gotha, the first homoerotic
book in the German Language. [AA]
-
1809:
New York - In Genton vs. Reed, the state Supreme Court
recognizes common-law marriage, which won't be declared
void until 1901.
-
1809, Mar. 31:
Birth of Edward Fitzgerald, English writer who cruised
the Suffolk docks "looking for some fellow to accost
me and fill a very vacant place in my heart."
[Greif 82]
-
1809, Dec 29:
Birth of William Gladstone (death May 19, 1898) The
four time Prime Minister of England was dedicated to
self flagellation both to punish himself for impure
thoughts and to achieve a pleasure from the act, which
he then repented. [JWB]
-
1810:
The Napoleonic Code is instituted in France. It
eliminates all laws forbidding homosexuality. [AA]
-
1810:
The mother of a schoolgirl accuses Marianne Woods
and Jane Pirie, mistresses at a boarding school for
girls, of "improper and criminal conduct"
with each other, The British courts debate whether
a sexual relationship between women was even possible.
Lillian Hellman used his plot 120 years later as the
basis for her play The Children's Hour. [AA]
-
1813, April 28:
Prince Mikhail Kutuzov, who lead the defense of Moscow
against Napoleon, dies of a heart attack while having
sex with a soldier.
-
1814, Sept 13:
On this day Francis Scott Key wrote "The Star
Spangled Banner." This deserves a healthy "so
what?" from most readers of this list. But Key set
his flag waving poem to music originally titled "Anacreon
In Heaven". The Anacreonitics, who delighted in copying
the Greek poet's style, seemed to miss the subject, which
was largely about boys he diddled. OK, whatever the
etymology the anthem is unsingable.
-
1814, Dec 2:
Death, at Charenton Asylum of Donatien Alphonse
Francois de Sade, the Marquis.
-
1820, May 12:
Birth of Florence Nightingale, who is alleged to
have said, "I have lived and slept in the same
bed with English Countesses and Prussian farm women...
No woman has excited passion among women more than
I have."
-
1821, Nov 11:
Birth of Feodor Dostoeovski (death Feb 9, 1881).
The writer's letters to his beloved Anna are peppered
with direct references to his fetish for her feet. His
contemporary, Turgenev, called him "the Russian
Marquis de Sade," perhaps suggesting more than
the Anna letters reveal.
-
1824, Nov 6:
In France the Marquis Astolphe de Custine is sadistically
gang-raped by a group of soldiers with whom he had made
an assignation.
-
1825, Aug 28:
Birth of Karl Heinrich Ulrichs, German sexologist and
activist [Greif 82]
-
1826:
Karl Ernst von Baer discovers the human ovum. [wd]
-
1828:
The English Parliament closes a loophole in its
definition of the capital crime of buggery. It would
no longer be necessary to demonstrate "The actual
Emission of Seed" to convict someone of buggery
or rape. [AA]
-
1828:
First publication, in Leipzig, Germany, of the Memoirs
of Casanova.
-
1830:
Publication in France of the two volume work La
Marquise de Gange, of which de Sade is the anonymous
author.
-
1833, Jan 28:
The birth of Charles George "Chinese" Gordon,
military hero of Imperial Britain and martyr at Khartoum.
He was fond of picking up street urchins, bathing them,
feeding them and mending their clothes with his very own
needle and thread." [Greif 82]
-
1834 - 36:
Heinrich Hoessli, a Swiss milliner, publishes his two
volume set Eros: On the Love of Men, in German. It
collected all the examples he could find of homosexual
love in ages past -- Greek, Roman, and Persian love
poems and manuscripts - and was one of the first books
in modern times to give a positive view of
homosexuality. [AA]
-
1835, June 15:
Birth of Adah Isaacs Menken (death Aug 25 1868).
This most famed sexpot of the Victorian age was
the star of "Mazeppa." She flashed
apparent nudity in the face of Emperor Franz
Josef -- he like it. She was also the lover in
reality, or publicly held fantasy, of many famous
men including numerous crowned heads and chiefs
of government. She was once paid by Dante Gabriel
Rosetti to spend the night with poet Charles Swinburne,
giving him the flogging he wanted, possibly in an
attempt on Rosetti's part to convince the poet that
women were desirable sex partners. [JWB]
-
1836:
Death of Threse Berkeley who supervised a flagellant
brothel at 28 Charlotte St, London. Ms Berkeley is
the inventor of the Berkley bench/horse, a specialized
piece of furniture for flogging and bondage. [R]
-
1836:
The last execution for homosexuality takes place in
Britain, although the death penalty for homosexuals
will remain on the books until 1861. [AA]
-
1836, Jan 27:
Birth of Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, author of Venus
in Furs. The man who put the "M" in SM.
-
1837, April 5:
Birth of British poet Charles Algernon Swinburne
who wrote many lines in praise of switches on asses.
-
1840, Aug 14:
Birth of German psychiatrist Richard von Krafft-Ebing
in Mannheim, Germany [wd]
-
1843:
Massachusetts repeals its 138 year old antimiscegenation law.
-
1843:
Hungarian physician Heinrich Kaan publishes his report
named Psychopathias sexualis, reinterpreting sins of
the flesh as psychological disorders. The theological
terms "deviation", "aberration",
and "perversion" are introduced into medicine. [wd]
-
1844:
In The Queen vs. Millis, common law marriages are
declared illegal in England.
-
1844, March 30:
Birth of Paul Verlaine, poet and lover of poet Arthur
Rimbaud (born Oct 20, 1854). He was imprisoned for two
years after shooting his lover. He wrote Sonnet to an
Asshole which begins "Dark and wrinkled like a
deep pink, / It breathes, humbly nestled among the
moss / Still wet with love..." [Greif 82]
-
1844, July 25:
Birth of Thomas Eakins in Philadelphia. The great
American artist specialized in painting muscular,
nude male models, nude male athletes and nude male
bathers. [Greif 82]
-
1844, Aug 29:
Birth of Edward Carpenter, the great English "sexual
emancipator." Believing the effeminacy of
"Uranians" a myth, he affected a form of
macho dress, as did his working-class lover George
Merrill, that make them both look, almost a century
later, awfully contemporary. [Greif 82]
-
1844, Oct 15:
The birth of Friedrich Nietzche. (death Aug 25 1900).
The philosopher was not an ardent of SM, but listed
among the four women in his life one married woman
whom he flogged during sex and who, dressed as a man,
beat him senseless before another sexual encounter.
Also, a photo of Nietzche shows him as one of two
gentlemen horses "pulling" a cart on which
Lou Andreas-Salome (not "the" married woman)
crouches with a knotted whip raised. [JWB]
-
1846, Feb 20:
New York City policeman Edward McCosker is dismissed
for "indecently feeling the privates" of a
male passerby while on duty.
1850 - 1899
-
1854, Feb 16:
Birth of English writer Horatio Forbes Brown. When he
died in 1926 his executors burned most of his unpublished
works, attempting to hide his taste for sailors, footmen
and other strapping members of the lower orders. One of
his surviving poems depicts a boring society musicale in
which every stanza ends with the line, "But I liked
their footman John the best." [Greif 82]
-
1856, May 6:
Birth of Sigmund Freud in Freiberg, Austria. [wd]
-
1857:
French physician B. A. Borel champions the concept of
physical and mental "degeneration" that is
also used to explain "incorrect sexual behavior".
The concept will dominate psychiatric thinking until
Freud. [wd]
-
1857, Feb 22:
The birth, in London, of Robert Stephenson Smyth
Baden-Powell, founder of the Boy Scouts, army officer,
and homosexual.
-
1858, June 12:
Birth of Henry Scott Tuke, British painter and grand
master of romantic boy painting. He was an athlete who
took great pride in his splendid body and was obsessed
with painting nude boys and experimented, and succeeded,
in developing a special technique for capturing on canvas
the effect of sunlight on naked skin. [Greif 82]
-
1861:
England eliminates the death penalty for male homosexual
acts; offenders are now subject to imprisonment for ten
years to life. [AA]
-
1862, Aug 6:
Birth of Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson, professor of
classics at Cambridge where the students were only
too happy to satisfy his tastes as a boot-fetishist.
He wrote of one young man, "I liked him to stand
upon me when we met." [Greif 82]
-
1864, Sept 1:
Birth of Roger Casement in Ireland. In the course of
British consular service, he exposed the atrocious
conditions imposed on gatherers of wild rubber in the
Congo and similar conditions in South America. He was
knighted for his services. But, though an Ulster protestant,
he became an ardent Irish nationalist. He was arrested and
tried for treason. What sealed his doom was the admission
as evidence of his diaries which recorded all of his sexual
encounters, itemizing both the amount of the transaction
(if the stud was for hire) and the size of his equipment.
It made for sensational evidence in 1916: "Stanley
Weeks, 20, stripped, huge one, circumcised; swelled and
hung quite." "Enormous 19 about 7" and 4
thick; into me." Casement was hanged on Aug 6, 1916,
a martyr for more than Ireland.
-
1865, July 15:
Death of James Miranda Barry (1795-1865) a Major General
and Surgeon in the British Army with a highly distinguished
career and a reputation as a rake who was known to flirt
openly with the best looking women in the room. When a
charwoman was preparing the body for burial it was
discovered that the Major General was female. [Greif 82]
-
1866:
Superstition & Force by Henry Charles Lea published
in Britain. Edited and republished as The Ordeal by Edward
Peters in 1973.
-
1867, Aug 29:
While speaking to a conference of jurists in Munich, Karl
Ulrichs becomes the first known person in modern times
to publicly declare himself a homosexual (though not
using that word) and to speak out in favor of gay
rights (obviously, not using those words). [AA]
-
1869:
Karl Maria Kertbeny, writing anonymously, uses the
term "Homosexual" in a pamphlet calling
for repeal of Prussia's sodomy laws. This is the
earliest know use of this term. It began appearing
in US medical journals in the 1890's and in general
usage during the 1920's.
-
1869, Dec 8:
In Austria Leopold von Sacher-Masoch begins
correspondence with Fanny Pistor, aka Baroness Bogdonoff,
aka Mistress Wanda, his Venus in Furs.
-
1870:
The first American novel to touch on gay themes, Joseph
and His Friend, by Bayard Taylor, is published. But
the homosexual elements are so subtle that a non-gay
reader could easily miss them. [AA]
-
1872, Aug 21:
Birth of artist Aubrey Beardsley, who drew many men
with gigantic phalluses and many asses being caned.
Beardsley's professional affiliation with Oscar Wilde
ruined him and he died from tuberculosis less than
three years after Wilde's famous trial. It is
believed that Beardsley was not himself gay and
that his ruin was largely a case of "guilt
by association". [Greif 82]
-
1872:
The newly formed German empire adopts a penal code
that includes the infamous Paragraph 175, outlawing
male homosexuality. The new law becomes a catalyst
for the nascent German homophile movement. [AA]
-
1873, Jan 28:
In France the birth of writer Sidomie-Gabrielle
Colette (d. 1954), who wore a bracelet engraved "
I belong to Missy."
-
1874:
For the Term of His Natural Life by Marcus Clarke
published in Australia. US edition in 1973.
-
1875, March 7:
Birth of Maurice Ravel, French composer. Gay but no
record of his being into leather. However, his Bolero
is among the best dungeon music possible, talk about
slow build up to an exciting crescendo!
-
1875, April 15:
Balloonists Sivel and Croche-Spinelli die in a fall
over India. Buried together in Pere-Lachaise Cemetery
in Paris, their monument depicts them lying together,
naked, hand in hand, partially covered by a sheet. [TOL]
-
1877, April 30:
Birth of Alice B. Toklas. "Throughout most of
her life, this selfless woman's major occupation was
the care and maintenance of Gertrude Stein." [Greif 82]
-
1879, Jan 1:
The birth of E. M. Forester, British novelist, who
had as his lover for half a century a virile, handsome,
married, London policeman who granted his most elemental
wish: "to love a strong young man of the lower
classes and be loved by him and even hurt by him."
[Greif 82]
-
1879, July:
The first erotic magazine, "The Pearl, a Journal
of Facetiae and Voluptuous Reading", consisting
of stories with flagellation themes and attributed
to Algernon Charles Swinburne, is distributed among
high society. It last for 18 issues until Dec 1880. [wd]
-
1882:
In Pace vs. Alabama, the USA Supreme Court upholds a
law that makes interracial adultery more serious than
intraracial adultery, arguing that interracial couples
would produce genetically inferior offspring.
-
1882, Feb 2:
Birth of James Joyce, avant-garde novelist who made
his lover, Nora Barnacle, into a dominant of whom he
begged beatings and floggings "in earnest."
We don't know if she said yes or no. [JWB]
-
1885:
The British Parliament at first tables the Criminal
Law Amendment Act which made all acts of "gross
indecency" between males, whether in public or
private, an offence punishable by up to two years
imprisonment. However a rally that the Purity Campaign
organizes in Hyde Park attracts a crowd of thousands
and on this wave of hysteria the law is rushed through
parliament. It became known as "The Blackmailer's
Charter" and was the law under which Oscar Wilde
was later tried and convicted.
-
1885, Sept 11:
The Birth of D. H. Lawrence, a man who has come to be
seen as the high-priest of heterosexual love. But it
is know that at one time Lawrence had become so friendly
with a handsome farm boy named William Henry that his
wife Feieda adamantly refused ever to allow the young
man to enter the Lawrence's house. Whatever his sexual
proclivities were, his writing was the major concern
of censorship in the US, and when the likes of Lady
Chatterley's Lover were finally cleared by customs,
the DAM had really broken.
-
1886, Feb 22:
The Birth of William Seabrook (death Sept 20, 1945).
This top-rated writer about exotic places (from personal
experience) was equally famous among the literate for
his elaborate, long-term bondage of beautiful, young
women. [JWB]
-
1886:
The Austrian police physician Richard von Krafft-Ebing
publishes the first edition of his Psychopathia sexualis
with 110 pages and 45 case histories. He creates the
diagnosis of "pedophilia" and adopts
"sadism" from earlier French usage.
"Masochism" is not introduced until
the sixth edition. [wd]
-
1887:
The state of Pennsylvania raises its age of consent
from 10 to 16, after a campaign by the Women's Christian
Temperance Union and the White Cross Society.
-
1888, Aug 15:
The birth of Thomas Edward Lawrence, Lawrence of Arabia,
who was captured, caned and raped by Turkish soldiers,
and who loved it so madly he hired Robert Bruce to flog
him regularly after he returned to England. [Greif 82]
-
1888, Aug 16:
The birth of Edgar Montillion Wolley, better known
as the American actor Monty Woolley. His taste was
for black men, generally supplied by an assortment
of New York pimps. He fell in love with one and they
lived together for years as lovers. [Greif 82]
-
1889:
A male brothel is discovered at 19 Cleveland St. in
London's West End. The Scandal becomes the talk of
society and many important figures, including Prince
Albert Victor, second in line to the throne, are rumored
to be implicated. [AA]
-
1889, July 5:
Birth of Jean Cocteau, French artist, writer and
filmmaker. One of the many customs regarding polite
Parisian pissour manners was known as the "privilege
du cape." This allowed a Frenchman who could not
find a convenient pissoir to approach a gendarme and
ask him to extend his cape so that he could take a leak
behind it. One of Cocteau's favorite amusements was to
choose a handsome young cop and pretend that he was
drunk. With luck he could get his trouser buttons
undone by the helpful gendarme -- and possibly more.
Uncooperative victims wound up with wet shoes. [Greif 82]
-
1890's:
The "gay '90's" were the time Florenz Ziegfeld
started the modern commercial exploitation of muscular
males in vaudeville exhibitions of strength. He made
the German strongman Eugen Sandow a household name as
Sandow the Magnificent. Sandow often appeared wearing
only a large fig leaf. [Hooven 95]
-
1891:
Publication of A Problem in Modern Ethics by John
Addington Symonds, it provides a systematic review
of scholarly literature on homosexuality. [AA]
-
1892:
The New York Times becomes the first US newspaper
to use the word "lesbian" in a news story:
"Lesbian Love and Murder" about a suicide
pact made by two young women after their parents forbid
them to see each other. [TOL]
-
1892, June 5:
Birth of Ivy Compton-Burnett, British novelist whose
work has been called "morality plays for the
tough-minded," and who lived most of her life
in total subservience to Margaret Jourdain, a scholar
and expert in 18th Century furniture. [Greif 82]
-
1893:
Richard Freiherr von Krafft-Ebing first uses the
term "homosexual" and attributes it to
an indelible personality trait, rather than to a
sexual activity. [Hooven 95]
-
1893, Feb 20:
Birth of Bill Tilden, first American to win at
Wimbledon (d. 1953). He was considered one of the
greatest athletes of the 20th Century, but was
snubbed by the tennis world when his homosexuality
became known.
-
1893, Oct 30:
Birth of bodybuilder Charles Atlas, who, though
not gay, made a major contribution to the beauty
of men.
-
1894:
One of the earliest known gay organizations is
formed by George Cecil Ives. The Order of Chaeronea
took its name from the Greek battle of 338 BC at
which the Sacred Band of Thebes was annihilated. [AA]
-
1894, Feb 18:
John Sholto Douglas, the 18th Marquis of Queensberry
leaves a card at the Albermarle Club in London
addressed "to Oscar Wilde posing as a somdomite"
(sic) triggering the incident that was to bring about
Wilde's downfall. The Marquis is better know among other
circles as the compiler of the governing rules of the
sport of boxing.
-
1894, June 7:
The Blackmailers, a play by John Gray and his lover
Andre Raffalovich, receives its one and only performance
at the Prince of Whales Theatre.
-
1895:
Bom-Crioulo, The Black Man and The Cabin Boy by Adolfo
Caninha published in Brazil.
-
1895, Jan 1:
Birth of J. Edgar Hoover, for many years head of the
US Federal Bureau of Investigation. He maintained secret
surveillance files on individuals and organizations,
including gay and other sexually identified ones. He
was a homosexual and homophobe. (died: May 2, 1972)
-
1895:
Oscar Wilde is convicted of committing "indecent
acts" with young lower-class men and is condemned
to two years of hard labor. [AA]
-
1895, Mar. 9:
Official date of Leopold von Sacher-Masoch's death
from heart failure as given by his family. This
incorrect date is still found in a large number of
texts. Actual date of death:1905, see below. [wd]
-
1895, May 6:
Birth of Rudolfo Alfonzo Raffaelo Pierre Filbert
Guglielmi di Balentina d'Antonguolla in Castellaneta,
Italy. Better known as Rudolph Valentino, there is
little argument that he enjoyed male to male sex,
was dominated by his lesbian wife, and died because
his macho image demanded that he fight in a boxing
arena. But we love him best for the image of the
captured Sheik hanging from up-stretched arms to
that barred window, his chest bared, his body ready
for whatever we desire.
-
1896:
The English researcher Havelock Ellis starts work on
his monumental book, Studies in the Psychology of Sex. [wd]
-
1897:
Archaeologists working in Egypt find some of the
lost poetry of Sappho on papyrus scrolls used to
line ancient coffins and to stuff the carcasses
of mummified animals. [TOL]
-
1897, May 15:
Magnus Hirschfeld and five friends found the
Scientific-Humanitarian Committee in Charlottenburg,
then a suburb of Berlin. Their goal was to abolish the
antihomosexual Paragraph 175 in German law. The committee
dissolved on June 8, 1933 to avoid being banned by the
Nazis. Paragraph 175 was still in force.
-
1897, May 19:
Oscar Wilde is released from Prison in England.
-
1897, Nov:
Publication of the first English edition of Sexual
Inversion by Havelock Ellis (1859-1939), the first
book in English to treat homosexuality as neither
a disease nor a crime. (Born Feb 2, 1859)
-
1898, June 5:
The birth of Federico Garcia Lorca, gay Spanish
playwright who has the vicious Bernarda Alba, in
the play with her name, shout out to the mob
dragging away the adulteress, "Hot coals
in the place where she sinned!"
-
1898, Sept 21:
The birth in Moscow of artist Pavel Tchelitchew.
His cubistic painting, Figures, depicts a rape with
three male nudes. [Greif 82]
-
1898:
Der Eigene (The Exceptional) becomes the first gay
publication destined to a long existence, until 1931!
Edited by Berlin writer Adolf Brand who in 1903 founded
the Community of the Exceptional, after Hirschfeld's,
the second gay organization in Berlin.
-
1899:
The Torture Garden, a novel by Octave Mirbeau published
in France. First English edition in 1931. ReSearch
edition 1989.
-
1899:
Magnus Hirschfeld publishes the first issue of the
Jahrbuch der sexuelle Zwischenstufen (Journal of Sexual
Intermediates). [AA]
-
1899:
Publication of A Marriage Below Zero, by Alfred J.
Cohen, considered the first American novel in which
homosexuality is a central theme. Naturally the
homosexual character commits suicide. [TOL]
1900 - 1909
-
1901:
The death in New York of Mary Anderson, who had lived
as Murray Hall and had married two women.
-
1902:
Richard von Krafft-Ebing dies in Graz, Austria at age
62 of multiple strokes. [wd]
-
1903, Sept 10:
Birth of Ciril Connolly, English writer who was
considered one of the "bright young men"
of the 1920's. Chubby chasers should note that he
wrote: "Imprisoned in every fat man a thin man
is wildly signaling to be let out." OH YES!!
[Greif 82]
-
1903:
The British physician Havelock Ellis publishes
"Studies in the Psychology of Sex." [wd]
-
1904, Dec 17:
The birth, in New York City, of artist Paul Cadmus,
who wonderfully portrayed lusty sailors, and had a
painting destroyed by the Navy as being
"inappropriate".
-
1905:
The Memoirs of a Voluptuary, the Secret Life
of an English Boarding School by Anonymous
published in Britain. US edition in 1971.
-
1905:
Leopold von Sacher-Masoch dies in an insane
asylum in Mannheim, Germany. [wd]
-
1906:
Maximilian Harden, publisher of Berlin's Die
Zukunft, prints an editorial warning of the
danger presented by the homosexual conspiracy. [AA]
-
1906:
In Austria the first publication of Young Torless
by Robert Musil (Eng. ed 1955) a novel depicting
a sexually explosive hazing in an Austrian military
school.
-
1905:
The Austrian physician Sigmund Freud publishes his
"Drei Abhandlungen zur Sexualtheorie".
Sadism and masochism are described as illnesses
resulting from incomplete or faulty development
of a child's personality. Psychoanalysis, a form
of speculative philosophy with no empirical basis,
becomes the dominating theory in psychiatry for
the next 60 years. [wd]
-
1905, Mar. 2:
Birth of Marc Blitzstein, American composer. He
was murdered by a hustler in Fort-de-France,
Martinique in 1968.
-
1907:
A crowd of 2000 shows up for a debate about
Germany's sodomy law, the notorious Paragraph 175,
sponsored by the Scientific Humanitarian Committee. [AA]
-
1907:
Release of film Love Microbe, the first in which sex
is central to the plot. A scientist isolates the
"germ" that causes people to get the hots
for each other.
-
1907, Feb 21:
birth of W. H. Auden, English poet. His poem "The
Platonic Blow" was published in Fuck You: A
Magazine of the Arts in 1965 without his permission.
The poem was then issued in a Trade edition of 300
copies and a "Rough Trade" edition of 5
numbered copies each with "beautiful slurp
drawings." The first two lines of the poem are,
"It was a Spring day, a day for a lay, when the
air / Smelled like a locker-room, a day to blow or
get blown." [Greif 82]
-
1907, Sept 23:
Birth of Anne Declos, aka Dominique Aury, aka Pauline
Reage, the author of Historie d'O. (death: April 26
1998) [wd]
-
1908:
Sergei Pavlovich Diaghilev (born March 19, 1872;
died 1929) meets Vaslav Nijinsky (born March 12, 1890).
In their five years together Diaghilev totally dominates
Nijinsky's life as he shapes him into one of the finest
dancers the world has ever seen and creates a relationship
(slave and Master?) that eventually results in Nijinsky's
madness.
-
1908:
Publication of The Intermediate Sex by Edward Carpenter
in England. [AA]
-
1908:
First publication of Physical Culture magazine, the
first magazine to focus on the male physique with
lots of articles about sex and photos of scantily
clad men. (Hooven 1995)
-
1908, Aug 18:
Birth of Sir Frances Rose, the last of Gertrude
Stein's many artist protégés. In 1952 Alice B.
Toklas reported that Rose was in trouble because
of a Spanish gypsy boy he had found and hired as
both valet and bed mate. After an incident involving
a stolen bicycle Rose examined the boy's papers and
discovered that he was his illegitimate son. [Greif 82]
-
1909:
Two black men are accused of oral sex with one
another in Kentucky. They are not convicted because
the judge couldn't find any law on the books under
which to find them guilty. He urged that lawmakers
remedy this problem, and soon many states had
outlawed oral sex. [AA]
-
1909, April 23:
In Woodside, OH, the birth of writer Samuel M.
Steward, aka Phil Andros. As sex researcher Dr.
Alfred C. Kinsey's major contact with the world
of homosexual male SM he arranged and participated
in scenes staged for Kinsey's cameras.
1910 - 1919
-
1910:
Among the Klementi tribe in Albania, if a virgin swore
to twelve witnesses that she refused to ever marry, she
would be allowed to live as a man carrying weapons and
herding livestock. [TOL]
-
1910:
Magnus Hirschfeld creates the term "transvestite"
and is the first to separate them from homosexuals. [wd]
-
1910:
The Chicago Vice Commission reports the presence of
whole "colonies" of sexual perversion, including
a homosexual street gang, known as the Bluebirds, that
frequented Grant Park.
-
1910, May 14:
Alice B. Toklas and Gertrude Stein begin living
together in Paris. [TOL]
-
1910, Dec 19:
Birth in Paris of Jean Genet, his gay and SM themed
works include The Balcony, Querelle du Brest, and Our
Lady of the Flowers. (Death in 1986)
-
1911:
A law is passed in the Netherlands prohibiting sexual
contact between members of the same sex under the age
of 21. The law sparked Dutch nobleman Jacob Schorer to
form Nederlandsch Wetenschappelijk Humanitair Komitee,
modeled after Hirschfeld's Scientific Humanitarian
Committee in Germany. The NWHK provided support to
homosexuals until 1940 when Schorer destroyed its
records to prevent them from falling into the hands
of the Nazis. [AA]
-
1912:
The Scientific Humanitarian Committee polls candidates
for the forthcoming Reichstag election to learn their
view on gay issues. Ninety one out of the 96 who respond
say that they favor gay rights! [AA]
-
1913:
Alfred Redl, head of Austrian Intelligence, is exposed
as a double agent working for the Russians. He commits
suicide the next morning. Authorities who search his
rooms find abundant indications that Redl had been a
homosexual. The widely publicized case gives prominence
to the idea that homosexuals are security risks, and 37
years later, US Senator Joseph McCarthy used the Redl
case to raise similar fears. [AA]
-
1914:
Publication of Dictionary of Criminal Slang which
includes the first known printed definition of the
word "faggot" as a term for "a male
homosexual'. [TOL]
-
1914:
Magnus Hirschfeld publishes his 1067 page study on
homosexuality. [wd]
-
1915, May 25:
Foreseeing a wartime shortage, Amy Lowell hoards 10,000
of her favorite Havana cigars in her home in Brookline,
MA. (born Feb 9, 1874)
-
1916, Nov 29:
Birth of artist Neel Bate, as "Blade" one
of the pioneers of gay erotica. His most famous work,
an underground classic in pre-Stonewall days is The
Barn, which he wrote and illustrated.
-
1916, Dec 30:
On this date Grigori Rasputin is murdered. The Russian
monk, who was a famous sexual adventurer, spent some
years initiating women into the reportedly Christian
cult of flagellants before he settled into the court
o Nicholas and Alexandria. There is no evidence that
his position in the Russian court stopped or impeded
his involvement with the female flagellants cult. [JWB]
-
1917:
The new revolutionary government of the Soviet Union
abolishes the sodomy laws of the tsarist regime. [AA]
-
1917:
The Bolshevik government in Russia says it will
recognize only civil marriages.
-
1917, Nov 20:
T. E. Lawrence "of Arabia" (1888-1935)
being held captive by the Turks at Deraa is caned
and (probably) raped by Turkish army officers, an
incident described in his 1926 book The Seven Pillars
of Wisdom. His taste for the cane continued through life.
-
1918:
Publication of Life is Movement, the autobiography
and manual of Hungarian born Eugen Sandow, who thrilled
audiences in New York and London throughout the 1890's.
Billed as "The world's strongest man" he often
appeared wearing only a metal fig leaf, held in place
by a spring metal strap that was hidden in the cleft
of his ass.
-
1919:
Magnus Hirschfeld founds the Institute for Sexology in
Berlin. The Institute combines the world's first sex
counseling center, a museum, a library and an ongoing
series of educational events. [AA]
-
1919, Jan 7:
Birth of Robert Duncan, a leading poet of the San
Francisco renaissance. The first poet to use the
word "cocksucker" in print and the first
to strip to the buff during poetry readings. [Greif 82]
-
1919, May 24:
Release of Anders als die Andern (Different from
the Others), one of the earliest films to offer
viewers a gay-positive perspective. It costarred
Konrad Veidt and Magnus Hirschfeld. [AA]
1920 - 1929
-
1920, May 8:
The birth in Finland of Touko Laaksonen, the erotic artist
who would become known to leather men of the world as Tom
of Finland. (Died 1992).
-
1921:
The Theatre des Eros, the first theater devoted
exclusively to gay plays, is founded in Berlin. [AA]
-
1921:
Publication in France, of Sodome et Gomorrhe by
Marcel Proust. [AA]
-
1921, March 29:
The birth in London of actor Dirk Bogarde whose
autobiography reveals an adolescent seduction by
a man who first mummy wrapped him in bandages.
-
1921, Sept 16:
The First Congress for Sexual Reform opens at Berlin's
Institute for Sexology. [AA]
-
1922:
The Soviet Union re-introduces the concept of "crimes
against nature" and begins the process (finalized by
Stalin in 1933) of re-criminalizing homosexual acts. [AA]
-
1922:
"Miss Furr and Miss Skeene" by Gertrude Stein
is published in Vanity Fair. This is regarded as the first
published fiction using the word "gay" to refer
to homosexuality. [TOL]
-
1922:
The God of Vengeance, a play by Sholom Asch featuring
a lesbian relationship, is produced in Provincetown,
MA. It is the first play on an American stage to depict
gay or lesbian characters, and created an outcry the
next year when it reached Broadway. [AA]
-
1922:
A petition to abolish Paragraph 175, Germany's sodomy
law, is presented to the Reichstag, but without success.
The petition was largely the work of Magnus Hirschfeld
and his Scientific Humanitarian Committee, and was signed
by such prominent intellectuals as Albert Einstein, Herman
Hesse, Thomas Mann, and Leo Tolstoy. [AA]
-
1922:
Birth, in Hailey, Idaho, of Bob Mizer, creator of the
Athletic Model Guild and Physique Pictorial. Died: May
19, 1992. [WES]
-
1924:
The 17th edition of Krafft-Ebing's Psychopathia sexualis
is published. It will be translated into seven languages. [wd]
-
1924:
In Virginia, AA bill to preserve the integrity of the
white race" prohibits white marriage with any
non-white. Richmond uses the law to segregate housing,
prohibiting residence by any person who could not marry
into a majority of families already on the block.
-
1924:
Andre Gide, in If It Die, makes his homosexuality public.
He is the first prominent individual in modern times to
do so. [AA]
-
1924, Apr 3:
Birth in Omaha NB, of Marlon Brando, who's levis, tight
t-shirt, and leather jacket created a look so many copied.
-
1924, Apr 15:
Birth of Dr. Howard Brown, American public health
administrator.
-
1924: Oct 24:
The New York Times reviews Dr. Joseph Collins' book
The Doctor Looks at Love and Life in which Collins
concluded that "the majority of homosexuals...
are not degenerates". The review is the first
time the word "homosexual" has appeared
in this newspaper. [AA]
-
1924, Dec 10:
The Society for Human Rights, founded in Chicago
by Henry Gerber (1892-1972), probably the first
"gay lib" organization in the US, is
granted a charter by the Illinois legislature. It
lasted only a few months but during that time Gerber
brought out two issues of the country's first gay
liberation magazine, Friendship and Freedom. [AA]
No copies of these are known to still exist.
-
1925, Jan 14:
The birth of Yukio Mishima. His erotic drive was
always advanced by his fantasies of SM-drawn blood.
His suicide (Nov 25, 1970) blended his erotic fantasies,
his political theories and his flair for public drama. [JWB]
-
1925, May 21:
The birth of Dr. Franklin Kameny, founder of the Mattachine
Society and spiritual godfather of all contemporary activists
for sexual freedoms.
-
1925, Aug 2:
Birth of Roy Dean, photographer of the American Male in
the all together, and often in nature as well. He is also
the power behind Colt Studios and, as an artist, is known
as both Colt, and in the pre frontal nudity days, as Lugar.
-
1926:
The German physician Albert Moll organizes the "1.
International Conference on Sex Research" in Berlin. [wd]
-
1926, Feb 15:
Birth of British film director John Schlessinger, whose
Midnight Cowboy (1969) was kicked to pieces by the critics
for being too gay, and by militant gays for not being gay
enough. [Greif 82]
-
1926, May 30:
Birth of George Jorgensen, who went to Denmark for
surgery and became Christine Jorgensen, the world's
best known transsexual.
-
1926, June 3:
Birth of Beat poet Allen Gunsberg who horrified W. H.
Auden by kneeling and kissing the older poet's trouser
cuff. [Greif 82]
-
1926, Oct 15:
Birth, in Poitiers, France, of philosopher and gay
sadomasochist Paul-Michael Foucault. (d. 1984) [wd]
-
1928:
D. H. Lawrence's Lady Chattrley's Lover is published
in France. Banned in Britain, it is only in 1960 that
a British court declares the book to be art not porn.
-
1928:
Publication of Radclyffe Hall's The Well of Loneliness.
Calling for the "merciful toleration of inverts,"
it became the best known book in English with a lesbian
theme. [AA]
-
1928, March 18:
Birth of American playwright Edward Albee. Who's Afraid
of Virginia Woolf? may or may not really be about a male
couple, but is it an SM scene?
-
1929:
The French judge Rene Guyon starts work in Thailand on
his Studies in Sexual Ethics, claiming that an individual
has a right to free sexual expression as long as the rights
of others are not harmed. [wd]
-
1929, Jan 12:
The publishers of Radclyffe Hall's The Well of Loneliness
are served with a summons in an effort to censor the
lesbian novel.
-
1929, Aug 26:
Birth in Chicago of Chuck Renslow, who with his partner
Dom "Etienne" Orejudos, was to father Kris
Studios, The Gold Coast, Man's Country, International Mr.
Leather, and other enterprises. More Recently Chuck has
been instrumental in founding The Leather Archives &
Museum and the Chicago Eagle.
-
1929, Aug 29:
Birth of English born American poet Thom Gunn. [Greif 82]
1930 - 1939
-
1930's:
Anthropologists report among the Nuer tribe in the Sudan there exist
unions in which a woman marries another woman and counts as the
father of her children.
-
1930:
Denmark repeals its sodomy laws. It is the first European nation
to respond to the early homophile movement. Poland, Switzerland,
and Sweden all follow suit within fifteen years. [AA]
-
1930:
Marlene Dietrich, in the film Morocco, makes the first of her
many male impersonations.
-
1930:
Publication of The Story of Punishment, Man's Inhumanity to Man
by Harry Elmer Barnes. Revised edition 1972.
-
1931:
The Chinese Nationalist Party forbids arranged marriages.
-
1931, Feb 8:
The birth, in Marion, Indiana, of James Dean. The mysterious
masochist and cultural icon did nothing in his life to dispel
the rumors of his masochism (preferring, it is said, to be
burned with cigarettes and to be kicked and stepped on) and
the rumors became legends after his death in a car crash on
Sept 30, 1955. [JWB]
-
1932:
The Zenith of gay activity in Berlin which then had over 300
homosexual bars and cafes, of which a tenth were lesbian. Between
1933 and 1945 virtually all homosexual activity was driven
underground by the Nazis.
-
1932:
First publication in Zurich of Der Kreis one of the longest
running European gay magazines, it ceased publication in
1967. Articles were in German, English and French. It
frequently published material by American writers, artists,
and photographers, including the first fiction from Phil
Andros, and nude male studies by George Platt Lynes under
the pseudonym Robert Rolf.
-
1932, Dec 28:
Birth of Manuel Puig, Argentinian novelist whose work includes
"The Kiss of the Spider Woman".
-
1933:
Birth, in New South Wales, Australia, of artist Nigel Kent.
When he started drawing and painting male SM imagery he signed
his work "James D." but later began using his real
name. He has lived in the Netherlands since 1973.
-
1933, Jan 30:
Hitler bans all gay publishing in Germany.
-
1933, May 6:
In Berlin Nazis ransack Magnus Hirschfield's Institute for Sexual
Research and, on May 11, burn his library and museum collection
which, Christopher Isherwood reported, included many SM implements.
-
1933:
Noel Ersine's Dictionary of Underworld Slang lists "gay
cat" as meaning "a homosexual boy", this is the
earliest know PRINTED equation of the words "gay"
and "homosexual".
-
1933:
In Germany Hitler rises to power. Within two years a license of
"genetic cleanliness" is necessary for marriage and
a German cannot marry a Jew.
-
1933:
Department II of the German Gestapo is created for the express purpose of
hunting down and imprisoning homosexuals.
-
1933, July 1:
Birth of Domingo "Dom" Orejudos, better known as the
erotic artists Etienne and Stephen, and as partner with Chuck
Renslow in operation of Kris Studio, the Publication of Mars
and Rawhide magazines, the Gold Coast leather bar and Man's
Country baths in Chicago, and the founding of the
International Mr. Leather contest.
-
1934, March 7:
Stalin restores criminal sanctions against homosexuality
to the Soviet Union.
-
1934, March 10:
The birth in El Paso, Texas, of author John Rechy, whose
writing skirted the edges of leather sexuality, and about
which he had strong opinions.
-
1934, June 30:
Gay SS Chief Ernst Rohm, and many of his "Brown
Shirts" were assassinated by rival Nazis with the
approval of Hitler in the "Night of the Long
Knives."
-
1934:
Publication in England of The History of
Torture in England by L. A. Parry.
-
1935, April 9:
In a letter of this date Sigmund Freud wrote, "homosexuals
must not be treated as sick people..."
-
1935, May 13:
T. E. Lawrence "of Arabia" fatally injured in a
mysterious motorcycle "accident" in England. Dies
May 19, 1935. [JWB]
-
1936:
The American housewife Dorothy Spencer publicizes a scheme to
improve marriage by mutual domestic spanking. [wd]
-
1936:
Leftist German director Gustav von Wangenheim (1895-1975)
produces the film Bortsy (The Fighters) which depicts the
Nazis as homosexuals. In reaction the Hitler regime enacts
a new and more stringent version of the notorious Paragraph
175, and increase convictions for homosexual activity in
Germany.
-
1936:
The suicide of Robert Ervin Howard, creator of Connan the Barbarian.
Exceptionally close to his mother as a boy, and bullied by older
boys he turned to exercise and developed the body he admired in
other men. When his mother lapsed into a coma he blew out his
own brains with a borrowed pistol and Cross Plains, Texas, had
a double funeral. He was 30 years old and had written 21 Connan
stories in which images of muscular men suffering under the
domination of others was prominent.
-
1938:
The American zoologist Alfred C. Kinsey begins his studies on
human sexual behavior, using empirical data from over 12,000
interviews. [wd]
-
1938:
Fourteen US states introduce bills to impose restrictions
on marriage to persons with syphilis and other venereal
diseases in a "social hygiene" panic.
-
1938, March 17:
Birth of Rudolf Nureyev, Russian, then American, Ballet dancer.
Renowned for his love of rough trade a friend advised: "I
once told Rudi, he can be as naughty as he likes, but if he
isn't more careful, they're going to find him... some morning
in an alley in Soho, his head laid open with a lorry driver's
spanner." He died of AIDS in 1993.
-
1939:
Albert Moll dies of natural causes in Berlin before the Nazis
can transport him to a Death Camp. [wd]
-
1939:
In the film Bringing up Baby, Cary Grant, appearing in a dress,
exclaims that he has "gone gay". Historian John
Boswell credits this as the first public use of the term in
the US, outside of pornography and the homosexual community.
But it isn't until the 1970's that "gay" is widely
accepted as the standard, non-slang synonym for homosexual,
and not until 1987 that it is accepted by the New York Times.
-
1939, Jan 10:
Birth of actor Sal Mineo. He wore the leather jacket in Rebel
Without a Cause even though he was the obvious and willing
bottom to James Dean's reluctant Top. His gristly 1976 murder
has never been solved.
-
1939, Feb 24:
Birth of American playwright Doric Wilson.
-
1939, Sept 22:
Sigmund Freud, suffering from cancer in an advanced stage, dies
in London by morphine overdose through physician assisted
suicide. [wd]
1940 - 1949
-
1940, July 27:
Birth of the Reverend Troy Perry, Minister, activist,
leatherman, and. founder of the Metropolitan Community
Church. He devised a wonderful way to use the Gideon bible
found in every hotel room as a ball weight.
-
1941:
The first appearance of the cartoon character, Wonder Woman,
an Amazon with special powers, living on an all-woman island.
Her magical lasso rendered powerless anyone she placed in bondage.
-
1942, March 14:
MP's raid a gay brothel near Brooklyn Navy Yard, among the
clientele they find the US Senator who chairs the Naval Affairs
Committee.
-
1942, April 3:
Birth of Anthony F. DeBlase, aka Fledermaus, leather/SM writer,
editor, publisher, teacher, and creator of the Leather Pride Flag.
-
1943, July 22:
Birth of Robert Wiley Kirk, the erotic artist "Cirby"
(died Dec 21, 1991)
-
1943:
Jim Kepner is hoodwinked by a pen pal into joining the Sons of
Hamidy, a wholly imaginary group of political and military leaders
fighting for gay rights. Kepner quickly discovers the ruse, but
is so involved with the idea he begins a campaign to collect books,
papers, and other artifacts that grow into the International Gay
and Lesbian Archives, now housed at the University of Southern
California.
-
1944, June 10:
Christa Winsloe, author of Madchen in Uniform and vocal anti-Nazi
is murdered in Vichi France.
-
1945:
Justice Weekly begins publication in Toronto. This little
magazine excerpts news items related to punishment but it's
highly coded personal ads are to real attraction to SM people
all over North America.
-
1945:
Bob Mizer founds the Athletic Model Guild in Los Angeles.
His original intent is to serve as a middle man between hunky
young males and the artists and others seeking their modeling
(legitimate!) services. This aspect fails dismally so he begins
marketing the photos directly to the public. [WES]
-
1945:
Formation of the Veterans' Benevolent Association, the first
gay membership organization in the US, formed to try to get
homosexual soldiers some of the respect they deserved for
the hardships they had endured.
-
1945, May 31:
Birth of Rainer Werner Fassbinder, German film maker, author, director,
& actor. His films often deal with same-sex relationships in which
erotic desire becomes a function of the struggle for dominance of one
partner over another. (died 1982)
-
1945, Aug 7:
Birth of Cynthia Ann-Slater, San Francisco Bay area SM activist
and founder of The Society of Janus. [wd]
-
1945, Dec 11:
Birth of John Preston, author of Mr. Benson and many other notable
volumes of leather fiction.
-
1946:
A gay social club "The Shakespeare Club" is founded in
Amsterdam. (Name change to Centre for Culture & Leisure, in
1949) Dance nights become extremely well attended and to accommodate
the crowds, a large commercial dance hall, Der Oden Kring (DOK) is
opened in 1955. From this basis Amsterdam has become the gay
mecca of Europe.
-
1946:
Bob Mizer takes his first photos for the Athletic Model Guild.
The subject is 22 year old Howard Olson who had just been
discharged from the US Marine Corps. Olson wears only a
posing strap and is caught spread-eagled in the air in the
middle of a jump. [Hooven 95]
-
1946, Sept 26:
Birth of Andrea Dworkin, American writer and feminist. An ardent
crusader against pornography, SM and other sexual "evils".
-
1946, Dec 29:
Birth of William Carney, author of one of the earliest explicitly
gay male SM novels, The Real Thing.
-
1947:
Alfred C. Kinsey founds the "Institute for Sex
Research" at Indiana University. [wd]
-
1947:
California strikes down its antimiscegenation law.
-
1947, Mid:
Bob Mizer is arrested and charged with disseminating obscene material.
He refuses consul's advice and pleads "not guilty". He is
convicted and serves six months in a California Prison. Upon
release he resumes business exactly as before. In 1953 his
appeal reaches the US Supreme Court, where his conviction is
overturned because the judge errored in instructing the jury
on the legal definition of "obscene." [WES]
-
1947, July 4 - 6:
More than 4000 motorcycles converge on Hollister California and
their riders unleash 40 hours of drunken terror on the town. 40
CHiPs threaten to use tear gas. Nearly 100 bikers are jailed.
-
1948:
Axel and Eigil Axgil, a male couple, found the National Homosexual
Association, the first gay rights Organization in Denmark. On Oct
1, 1989 they are the first to marry under Denmark's same sex
marriage registry.
-
1948:
Alfred C. Kinsey publishes the first part of his study on
human sexual behavior, Sexual Behavior in the Human Male. [wd]
-
1948, March 3:
Birth of Albert Andrew Kraus Jr. Later to be a founder of the
Windy City Bondage Club, and a co-chair of NLA:I during a
critical period of it's redevelopment.
-
1948, March 9:
The Veteran's Benevolent Association, the first postwar American
homosexual organization, is incorporated in New York state.
-
1948, March 20:
Inspector Craig Ellis, head of the vice squad of Philadelphia Police
Dept gives his men a list of books he considers obscene and orders
that the city's bookstores be raided immediately and all titles
on the list be confiscated. No search warrants or court orders
of any kind are issued. 54 booksellers are raided and nearly 1200
books seized, including works by James Farrell, William Faulkner,
Erskine Caldwell, and Harold Robbins. The district attorney
brings suit against five of the booksellers. But Judge Curtis
Bok rules in favor of the booksellers and freedom of the press.
-
1949:
Sam Steward and Steve Masters meet in Alfred Kinsey's
garden. The two, who would each later be leather icons
in their own right, perform SM scenes for Kinsey's research. [R]
-
1949:
The Thief's Journal by Jean Genet is first published in France.
English edition 1964.
-
1949:
South Africa passes a law prohibiting interracial marriage.
1950 - 1959
-
1950's:
Mississippi makes publication of "general information, arguments,
or suggestions in favor of social equality or intermarriage between
whites and negros" a crime.
-
1950:
After a year of revolution in China a marriage law sets age
limits and allows widows to remarry. Prospective marriage
partners must be checked for "correct" thinking
with the party.
-
1950:
Publication of The Invisible Glass by Loren Wahl
-
1950:
Publication of Quatrefoil by James Barr
-
1950, June 15:
Chuck Renslow and Dom Orejudos start Kris Studios to publish
male physique photography. Orejudos begins sketching some of
the models.
-
1950, Nov:
The first issue of AMG's Physique Pictorial is issued. Cover
"Havasu Creek" by Quaintance. No copies of this
issue are known to exist. [Hooven 95]
-
1950, Dec:
Mattachine Society founded in Los Angeles. [JR]
-
1951:
(or by 53) Shaw's, New York City's first Leather Bar opens. [R]
-
1951:
Rene Guyon criticizes the United Nations for not including sexual
rights as a basic human right. [wd]
-
1951:
Clellan S. Ford and Frank A. Beach publish their study
"Patterns of Sexual Behavior", a comparison of
the sexual preferences of 200 cultures. The study shows
how relative Western sexual traditions are. [wd]
-
1951, April:
Harry Hay (born Apr 7, 1912), Rudi Gernreich, Chuck Rowland,
Bob Hull and Dale Jennings start The Mattachine Society in
Los Angeles.
-
1951, May 26:
British Foreign Office officials Donald Mclean and his cruel
"master" Guy Burgess defect to the USSR. [Greif 82]
-
1951, Nov:
The cover date of the oldest known extant copy of Physique
Pictorial Vol.1, No. 2. Cover painting of a nude man riding
a white horse through the surf: "Dashing" by
Quaintance. [Hooven 95]
-
1952:
(or by 54) The Lodge, New York City's second leather bar opens. [R]
-
1952:
Jack's on the Waterfront opens at 111 Embarcadero in San Francisco.
The bar particularly attracts longshoremen, motorcycle men other
butch types. Gradually evolves from a straight bar with "homo
space" to a gay bar with a maritime flavor. Closed in 1962
as part of the "gayola" scandals. [R]
-
1952:
Joe Wieder, a championship competitive bodybuilder who had
started a series of body building magazines converts his
American Manhood to compete with the "informal"
poses and slimmer "natural" physiques of magazines
like Physique Pictorial and Vim. [Hooven 95]
-
1952:
First publication of Tomorrow's Man. A tiny physique magazine
Published by Irv Johnson in Chicago, which combined the look
of Physique Pictorial with articles on body building and staying
in shape. It quickly became the #1 physique publication. [Hooven 95]
-
1952:
Alan Turing, mathematical genius, breaker of Nazi codes, acclaimed
as "the man who saved England" reports the theft of his
property by a hustler, when the police realize why the thief was
there Turing himself is arrested and prosecuted. He is chemically
castrated by the authorities and hounded by the press. He commits
suicide in 1954. [Hooven 95]
-
1952, April:
Dale Jennings, a member of the Mattachine Society in Los
Angeles is arrested by the police. Mattachine organizes The
Committee to Outlaw Entrapment.
-
1952, May 27:
Birth of Sasha Alyson, founder of Alyson Publications, a gay press
that gave presence to a broad range of gay and lesbian works,
including Coming to Power, the writings of John Preston, and
many other leather/SM works considered "marginal" at
the time, by other publishers.
-
1952, August:
Cover date of Physique Pictorial issue bearing a cover painting
by Quaintance, "Sacrifice," depicting a nearly naked
man chained in spread-eagle suspension to a vertical sun disk.
In the foreground two virtually naked warriors lie bleeding
(dying) from arrows penetrating their backs. This cover resulted
in censorship in Los Angeles county. No one objected to the
bondage, blood, or violent theme. They wanted the lushly rounded
asses of the dying warriors covered! [Hooven 95]
-
1952:
College English professor Sam Steward begins a sideline business
as Phil Sparrow, tattoo artist. [JR]
-
1953:
Alfred C. Kinsey publishes the second part of his study on human
sexual Behavior, Sexual Behavior in the Human Female. [wd]
-
1953:
The German physician Harry Benjamin coins the term
"transsexuals" and is the first to distinguish
them from transvestites. [wd]
-
1953, Apr 23:
US President Eisenhower issues orders prohibiting employment of
gays in government agencies. [JR]
-
1953:
Forbidden Colors, Yukio Mishima's novel with SM overtones is
first published in Japan. First English edition in 1968.
-
1953, Aug:
Tomorrow's Man #8 contains the first published art by Dom
Orejudos and the pseudonym Etienne is created.
-
1954:
Satyrs MC founded in Los Angeles, the first gay motorcycle club.
-
1954:
Historie d'O by Pauline Reage (real name, Anne Declos) first
published in France. In 1955 it won the Deux-Magots prize, an
important French literary award. In 1965 Grove Press publishes
the first English language edition as The Story of O.
-
1954:
Birth of Bob Flannigan, SM performance artist and
"Supermasochist" [wd]
-
1954:
The San Francisco police stage a crackdown on "Sex
Deviates" hitting particularly the area of Market and
Embarcadero streets.
-
1954:
Joe Wiedner begins publication of Body Beautiful and Adonis,
big budget, color cover, physique magazines which alternate
publication in succeeding months. The rise of physique magazines
threw the body building publishing world into a homophobic panic,
except for Wiedner who jumped in and competed. [Hooven 95]
-
1954:
On the urging of Jim Kepner and Ann Carrl Reid, Chuck Rowland starts
the Church of ONE Brotherhood to minister to the religious needs of
gays and lesbians. It prospers for about a year, then folds.
-
1954:
The movie "The Wild One" starring Marlon Brando as
a leather jacketed motorcycle gang member is released, creating
a sensation and giving seed to an image.
-
1954, Feb:
One magazine includes its first article about a women's issue.
Lesbians continued to be included in the content, and on the staff,
until 1959.
-
1954, June:
Suicide of Alan Turing in England, after being outed as
a homosexual when he reported the theft of some items by
a young man he had invited into his home. Turning had
been instrumental in breaking Nazi codes during the war,
and is considered the father of the computer.
-
1955:
Two by Eric Jourdan first published in France. This novel of male
love with definite SM elements was published in English in 1963.
-
1955:
Publication of Cool Hand Luke by Donn Pearce, the novel which
inspired Paul Neuman's superb movie performance as a member of
a southern prison camp chain gang.
-
1955, Sept 21:
The Daughters of Bilitis, the first Lesbian organization in
America, is formed in San Francisco.
-
1955, Sept 30:
James Dean is killed in a car crash in California. The actor's smoldering
sexuality and young death (at 24) elevated him to legendary status. The
persistent rumors that he enjoyed being burned with cigarettes and kicked
and trampled under men's feet provided hours of pleasant fantasy for
many Tops.
-
1955, Nov 1:
An anti-homosexual witch hunt begins in Boise, ID, later
documented by John Gerassi in The Boys of Boise.
-
1956:
The last of the US laws making epilepsy a disqualification for
marriage are removed.
-
1956:
Publication of The Street of the Sun by Lance Horner,
the most homoerotic and SM, of the Mandango family of
novels.
-
1956:
Publication of Sex Magick by Ian Young. Poetry from one of
Canada's best known leathermen. (born Jan 5, 1945).
-
1956, Sept:
Jim Kepner and Dorr started America's first gay studies classes.
In Jan 1957 they started the first 36 week course in World
History from the gay perspective. Kepner conceived and edited
Americas first gay scholarly-style journal: ONE Institute
Quarterly of Homophile Studies for three years.
-
1957:
The German physician Hans Lehfeldt founds the "Society for
the Scientific Study of Sexuality" (SSSS) in New York. [wd]
-
1957:
Amsterdam's first leather bar and hotel, The Argos, opens.
It is still in business!
-
1957:
The Spring issue of Physique Pictorial magazine includes the
first published erotic art of Tom of Finland, and marks the first
time that name is used.
-
1957:
Erotic artist George Quaintance dies.
-
1957:
Publication of Color of Darkness, a novel by James Purdy (born
July 14, 1923).
-
1957:
Publication of The Last Exit to Brooklyn, a novel by Hubert Selby
Jr. (born July 23, 1928)
-
1957:
In the Crittenden Report, the US Navy concludes that homosexuals
serving in the military do not create a security risk. The Pentagon
denies the existence of this report for twenty years.
-
1957, Sept 4:
In London the Wolfenden Report recommends decriminalization of
"private homosexual acts between consenting adults".
-
1958:
Both Federal and Chicago authorities charge Kris studios with
censorship violations. Renslow fights back, surprising the
prosecution. His defense uses the simple stand that nudity is
not obscene. In support his attorney shows photos of nude male
sculpture in the courthouse where the case is being held. Kris
was found not guilty, prosecution appealed and eventually the
same decision came from the US Supreme court. [Hooven 95]
-
1958:
Confessions of a Mask, an autobiographical novel by Yukio Mishima
first published in English.
-
1958:
The Balcony, Jean Genet's play which accommodates every sexual
desire, is published in French and English.
-
1958:
The gay SM novel, Muscle Boy, by Bud Clifton is published [wd]
-
1958:
Publication of The Question by Henri Alleg, an account of the
French Algerian newspaper man's torture at the hands of French
paratroopers.
-
1958:
Publication of Those about to Die , a history of the Roman games
and arena shows by Daniel P. Manix.
-
1958:
Oedipus MC founded in Los Angeles, the second gay motorcycle club.
-
1958, May 12:
The Homosexual Law Reform Society is founded in London.
-
1958, June:
Chuck Renslow becomes manager of The Gold Coast in Chicago and
creates the first Leather Bar. [JR]
-
1959:
The Big Dollar at 34th & 3rd in New York City opens, A VERY
leather bar. [R]
-
1959:
The Spur Club a leather friendly bar at 126 Turk in San Francisco's
tenderloin is raided and closed. [R]
-
1959:
In the San Francisco mayoral election homosexuality becomes a
political issue. The incumbent clamps down on
"queers". [R]
-
1959:
Publication of Naked Lunch by William S. Burroughs. (born Feb 5, 1914)
-
1959:
US Supreme Court rules in favor of allowing distribution of D.
H. Lawrence's novel, Lady Chatterley's Lover. [Hooven 95]
-
1959:
Kellers (bar) opens in New York City and becomes a gathering
place for gay motorcycle riders.
1960 - 1969
-
1960, March 16:
The Gold Coast, Chicago's first leather bar, (opened June 1958)
is purchased by Chuck Renslow and Associates.
-
1960:
The Why Not (518 Ellis St.) in the Tenderloin is San Francisco's
first leather bar. The owners hire Tony Taverossi to create an
atmosphere that will attract the leather crowd. The bar closes
shortly after opening when Tony propositions a vice squad cop. [R]
-
1960, Spring:
Owners of San Francisco gay bars revolt against police pay-offs
and the "Gayola Scandals" result. Police retaliate with
a vengeance and close most Gay bars in the city. [R]
-
1960:
Publication of Christ and The Homosexual by Robert Wood, which
includes a rather accurate description of one of the many SM
parties hosted by Bob Milne at his home in NYC in the early
1950's.[R]
-
1960:
A British court rules that D. H. Lawrence's novel Lady Chatterley's
Lover, is art not porn.
-
1960:
Warlocks MC, and California Motor Club formed in southern
California and San Francisco respectively.
-
1960:
DL Sterling, "The Leathermaker", makes his first pair
of motorcycle chaps.
-
1961:
Michael Foucault publishes Folie et deraison (Madness and Civilization).
claiming that the role of psychiatry in modern society is to remove
people who refuse to conform to it's norms. A shortened English
version is published in 1965. [wd]
-
1961:
The Hideaway, a leather friendly bar at 438 Eddy in San
Francisco's tenderloin raided and closed. [R]
-
1961:
The Tool Box at 339 4th St. at Harrison in San Francisco opened.
It took what Tony Taverosi had created at the Why Not and developed
it into what became the classic SF leather bar design. The bar
featured the Chuck Arnette mural of masculine men, which was made
famous by the June 1964 Life magazine. Closed in 1971.
-
1961:
Moved by the Gayola scandals, Jose Sarria becomes the first
openly gay man to run for San Francisco city supervisor. He
does not get elected.
-
1961:
Victim is the first film by a major British commercial studio
to feature homosexuality as its theme. Dirk Bogarde plays a
closeted barrister in a plot about gay blackmail and suicide.
-
1962:
The German sex researcher Hans Giese publishes his book
Psychopathologie der Sexualitat, with the intent of continuing
Krafft-Ebing's Psychopathia sexualis. In the medical text book,
which dedicates the first 30 pages to the importance of
Christianity in sex therapy, he quotes the French philosopher
Jean-Paul Sarte's theories on SM as research, and links
sadomasochism to the rise in abortions. Giese's school of
thought continues to dominate sex research in Germany until
today. In 1992, three of the four professors for sex research
in Germany will be former students of Giese. [wd]
-
1962:
Again, in response to the Gayola scandals and their aftermath
San Francisco bar owners and employees form the Tavern Guild,
to wield political influence.
-
1962:
Fisting is "invented" in a San Francisco basement. [R]
-
1962:
Satyr MC holds it's first Badger Flats Run. The annual event
continues uninterrupted for 33 years, until 1994. Then resumes
in 1998!
-
1962:
Publication of King Rat by James Clavell. The novel explores dominance
in men's relationships in a Japanese prison camp during WWII.
-
1962:
Otto Preminger's film of Alan Drury's novel Advise and Consent,
is the first movie explicitly showing a gay bar.
-
1962, Jan 1:
Effective this date Illinois repeal its sodomy laws and behavior
between "consenting adults in private" is no longer
subject to criminal prosecution.
-
1962, Nov:
Birth of Phil Andros as Sam Steward writing for eos and amigos
magazines of Denmark, uses this pseudonym for the first time.
-
1963:
Denmark becomes the first modern state to drop virtually all
censorship. [Hooven 95]
-
1963:
Publication of A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess, a novel
that gives a look at sex, violence, and mind control in a future
age.
-
1963:
Publication of the first English edition of Jean Genet's Our Lady
of the Flowers.
-
1963:
Publication of City of Night by John Rechy, a novel that takes
a close look at the underbelly of gay life: hustling as it was.
-
1963:
Publication of Pleasures of the Torture Chamber by Johnathan Swain.
-
1963:
Publication of Flagellation - The Rod & The Whip by George Bishop.
-
1963:
Publication of The Velvet Underground by Michael Leigh.
-
1963:
Physique Pictorial begins to print a scribbled code of
astrological symbols along with its photographs. The
symbols give Bob Mizer's ideas about the personalities,
and sexual proclivities, of the models. A code sheet to
decipher them is sent to favored customers. In 1967 the
symbols are used as part of the sexual pandering case
against Mizer. He destroys all copies of the code's
meanings. [Hooven 95] NOTE: LA&M would consider a
copy of this code sheet a very valuable addition to the
collection.
-
1963:
Scott Studio, one of the best physique photography studios
closes when Tom Nichol, the owner and photographer, moves
from London to California. Nichol is noted for early (before
1950) photos of men in boots, leather, biker caps, etc. and
for the infamous "Scott Shorts," thin white gym
style shorts always at least two sizes too small for his
models, who somehow squeezed into them. [Hooven 95]
-
1963, Feb:
Publication of the first (and only) issue of Young Adonis
magazine, the first to have substantial full color. The
cover trumpets "24 photos in color" and "More
Color than any other magazine!" [Hooven 95]
-
1963, May:
Mars magazine, a male physique publication with leather
leanings, begins publication. It is designed and edited
by Chuck Renslow and Dom Orejudos of Kris studios
-
1963, Sept 15:
Second City Motorcycle Club founded in Chicago.
-
1964:
The opening of the NYC World's Fair is preceded by a
"cleanup of gay bars", shutting down every
one in city except Julius' in the village. [R]
-
1964:
Publication of Rough Trade by Lou Rand.
-
1964:
Publication of Stockade a novel by Jack Pearl which focuses
on abuse in a military prison.
-
1964:
Publication of A History of Torture by Daniel P. Manix.
-
1964:
Publication of With Rod and Whip, A History of Flagellation
Among Different Nations by Valhalla Books.
-
1964:
Publication of the American edition of Flagellation Curiosa
Pt. 1: Sublime of Flagellation, by H. T. Buckle, Pt. 2: Experiences
in Flagellation, Compiled by an Ameteur [sic] Flagellant.
-
1964:
US courts allow importation of Danish magazines showing full
frontal male nudity if they are official publications of
nudist organizations. International Nudist Sun is the most
popular all male title, many others feature only women or
both men and women. [Hooven 95]
-
1964, June 26:
Life magazine features "Homosexuality in America,"
an article by Paul Welch that includes a two page spread on
the Tool Box, San Francisco's premier leather bar, and sparks
a migration of eager leathermen to "Baghdad by the Bay."
-
1964:
The first appearance of Al "A. Jay" Shapiro's cartoon
creation, "Harry Chess", in the Philadelphia based
gay monthly Drum.
-
1964:
Empire City MC founded in NYC and holds first Empire City
Christmas Party and Toys for Tots.
-
1964:
Recon MC founded in San Francisco.
-
1964:
Society for Individual Rights (SIR) founded in San Francisco.
-
1965:
Grove Press issues the first English edition of
Pauline Reage's The Story of O.
-
1965:
In New York City, Steve Masters (real name Mike Miksche,
a highly respected fashion artist) one of the most
talented homoerotic, and leather oriented, artists,
and publisher of the Physique Magazine, BIG, commits
suicide. His wife finds the studio where he worked on
his erotica, and had S/M scenes with other men, and
burns most of his art. Fortunately he had already
donated much work to Kinsey, for whom he had performed
SM scenes with Sam Steward.
-
1965:
Publication of Quatrefoil by James Barr, a novel of sex among
men in the US Navy.
-
1965:
Publication in Japan of Madame de Sade a play by Yukio
Mishima. First English publication in 1967.
-
1965:
Publication of The Lonely Sex - Mail Order Vice by Carlson Wade.
-
1965:
Formation of Saddlemasters MC and Saddlebacks of Orange County
both in California and of SixtyNine Club in London, England.
-
1965:
On the Levee a bar at 987 Embarcadero in San Francisco becomes
popular with the leather crowd. Closed in 1972. [R]
-
1965, Late:
A new physique magazine, Butch, produces its first issue,
filled with unidentified frontally nude male photos from
Arts Unlimited. Virtually simultaneously Drum an activist
gay magazine published in Philadelphia prints, in the copies
of its January 1966 issue that goes to subscribers, but not
to those sent to newsstands, the first full frontal male
nudes that are not presented in the guise of anthropological
study or nudist culture. [Hooven 95]
-
1966:
CMC (California Motorcycle Club) rents Sefarer's International
Union hall for their annual CMC Carnival, thanks primarily to
Don Rotan who was a member of both CMC and the Sefarer's union. [R]
-
1966:
Barbary Coasters MC formed in San Francisco.
-
1966:
Jose Sarria, "The Widow Norton," becomes the first
"Empress of San Francisco," and the gay Court System
has begun. [R]
-
1966:
Publication of Song of the Loon by Richard Amory, the first
of a trilogy of erotic novels that took the American fascination
with cowboys and Indians to a whole new level.
-
1966:
Publication of Sadism by Andre Tarade.
-
1966:
The American gynecologists William H. Masters and Virginia
Johnson publish their study on the Human Sexual Response. [wd]
-
1966:
The first complete male to female genital confirmation surgery
in the US takes place at Johns Hopkins University Hospital. [TOL]
-
1966, Feb:
North American Conference of Homophile Organizations (NACHO)
meets in Kansas City. It quickly deteriorates into a vicious
fight among organizations with differing objectives and
strategies. All of the elements of today's PC wars were
there, and doing battle.
-
1966, July 25:
FeBe's opens on Folsom in San Francisco and quickly becomes
one of the leading leather bars, particularly for members
of motorcycle clubs. The bar's "leather David"
logo (the original a plaster sculpture by Mike Caffee)
becomes a leather icon. A Taste of Leather, upstairs at
FeBe's, opens in 1967 as one of the first in-bar leather
shops. FeBe's closes in 1986. [R]
1967
Books published
-
Eustace Chisholm and the Works
a novel by James Purdy.
-
Numbers
by John Rechy, a novel exploring the gay male obsession
with accumulating tricks.
-
Brutality Through the Ages
by John Swain.
-
Sexual Sadism - The Pleasure of Inflicting Pain
by Edward Podolsky MD and Carlson Wade.
-
Erotic Variations
by John Barry.
-
Sex and Sadism
by Val Vane.
-
1967, Jan 1:
Los Angeles Police raid the Black Cat, the incident "boosted
the modest Pride Newsletter into The Advocate." [Kepner 95]
-
1967:
The "Summer of Love" in San Francisco
-
1967:
A survey that questions 643 Germans on their attitudes towards
sexual deviant groups shows that sadists are seen as egotistical,
aggressive, revolting, unsympathetic, wild, unbalanced, strict,
dominating, hard, active, cold, sick, introverted, pedantic,
and close-mouthed. They are associated with the stereotypes
of murderers and pimps. Homosexuals, themselves still considered
deviant, and students have slightly less negative attitudes.
Attitudes towards masochists are not examined. [wd]
-
1967:
Bob Mizer of Athletic Model Guild is arrested and charged with
running a male prostitution ring because of his first concept
of AMG as a referral service for models. He is convicted and
for most of 1968 Physique Pictorial fails to appear and Mizer,
who hated to travel, is not at home. [Hooven 95]
-
1967:
Formation of Cheaters MC and Constantines of the Bay Area,
both in San Francisco.
-
1967:
Barbary Coasters present their first annual San Francisco Motorcycle Awards.
-
1967:
Nick O'Demus opens his A Taste Of Leather shop upstairs at FeBe's.
One of the first in bar leather shops.
-
1967, Jul. 26:
The United States Federal Court for the District of Minnesota
upholds a landmark decision affirming the right of all persons
to receive materials dealing with the nude male figure. [JR]
-
1967, July 27:
The Sexual Offenses Act, removing criminality from sexual
relations between consenting adults, an action which had
been recommended by the Wolfenden Report in 1958, finally
becomes law in England and Wales.
-
1967, Aug:
The newsletter of PRIDE (Personal Rights in Defense and
Education) becomes The Los Angles Advocate.
-
1967, Aug:
The third national North American Conference of Homophile
Organizations (NACHO) meets in Washington, D.C., with friction
between East Coast and West Coast representatives.
-
1967, Oct 9:
The film I am Curious - Yellow premiers in Stockholm. It will
become a major example of sexual liberation in the US.
-
1967, Nov 17:
The Oscar Wilde Book Shop, the first gay and lesbian store of it's
kind, opens in New York City. For years all SM publications are
banned from the store.
1968
Books Published
-
One of the earliest explicitly gay male SM novels,
The Real Thing
by William Carney (born Dec 29 1946), is published by Putnam's,
a major publishing house.
-
The Agency,
and its sequel, The Agent, two novels of explicit
SM by David Meltzer.
-
The Figa
by Paul Mariah, a poem paean to fisting. [R]
-
1968:
Off the Levee is opened at 527 Bryant in San Francisco by the
owner of the leather bar "On The Levee". This location
later becomes the leather friendly bar and restaurant Chez Mollet. [R]
-
1968:
The Ramrod at 1225 Folsom in San Francisco, opened and
quickly succeeded FeBe's as THE leather bar, at least
for the SM crowd, while FeBe's remained the prime bar
for MC club socializing. [R]
-
1968:
Formation of Buddy MC and Warriors MC in California, Nine Plus
and Cycle MC in New York City; Serpents in San Francisco; Spartan
MC in Baltimore and Washington DC; SMCLA, later changed to Lost
Angels, in DC; V Senses Rubber Club in NYC; Rocky Mountaineers
MC in Denver; and Texas Riders MC, originally the Warlocks and
later the Cobras, in Houston.
-
1968:
Cycle MC holds first annual Bass River Run.
-
1968:
Metropolitan Community Church founded in Los Angeles by Rev. Troy
Perry, a leatherman.
-
1968:
In New York City several leather friendly bars, restaurants and private
clubs open. These include: The Hayloft private club; The International
Stud bar, JB's Restaurant, OK Corral dining room; the Skull after
hours bar; the Tool Box bar; and the Nine Plus clubhouse on 21st
St. Louie's Bar is renamed Louie's Spartan Lounge.
-
1968:
Cycle MC begins publication of it's newsletter Wheels and Nine
Plus begins publication of its Scimitar. New York Motor Bike
Club publishes last issue of its Black and Blue.
-
1968:
Alan Selby begins Mr. S Leathers in London, England.
-
1968, Jan:
Under pressure to abandon its militant roots, PRIDE was dissolved
by its founders, who sold The Advocate to Dick Michaels, Sam
Winston and Bill Rand for one dollar. [LRF]
-
1968, Jan:
Der Kreis, the world's oldest known homophile publication,
headquartered in Zurich, Switzerland, ceases publication after
thirty five years. [LRF]
-
1968, March:
An Orange County man looses his home and auto insurance after
a neighbor sees him kiss a man in his backyard. The neighbor
reports the incident to the police, who contact the man's
insurance company. [LRF]
-
1968, April 14:
Mort Crowley's play, The Boys in the Band opens in New York
City. (Birth Aug 21, 1935)
-
1968, Aug:
A dedication to militant law reform and a formalization in
structure sweeps through the North American Conference of
Homophile Organizations (NACHO) which meets in Chicago. [LRF]
-
1968, Aug:
LA police raid the Patch II, a gay bar in Wilmington, leading
"flower laden gays to raid the Harbor Police Station and
help start MCC and two other major organizations." [Kepner 95]
-
1968, Sept:
Demanding equal access to the Yellow Pages, San Francisco homophile
groups lodge a complaint with the California Public Utilities
Commission asking for a separate listing of "Homophile
Groups", the phone company accedes in August 1971, after
several years of court struggles.
-
1968, Dec:
The New Jersey Supreme Court rules that homosexuals have the right
to assemble in public, overturning the revocation of three New
Jersey bars' licenses for "permitting apparent homosexual
to congregate." [LRF]
1969
Books Published:
-
Publication in France of
Return to the Chateau
by Pauline Reage, a sequel to The Story of O. US edition
published in 1971.
-
Leather, The Leather Queens,
and several similar erotic novels by Dirk Vaden.
-
The American edition of
Flagellation & The Flagellants - A History of the Rod
by Rev. Wm. A. Cooper, BA.
-
$tud,
the first Phil Andros novel written by Samuel Steward and
published by Guild Press.
-
The Homosexual Handbook
by Josef Bush, which includes the names of people the author
suspects of being gay. The publisher quickly recalls and
destroys 7000 copies, then reprints the book omitting only
one name: J. Edgar Hoover. [TOL]
-
American anthropologist Paul Gebhard publishes his article on
Fetishism and Sadomasochism,
placing SM in a cultural context. SM is seen as a result of
cultural forces and as a form of scripted behavior. Gebhard's
break with the view of SM founded by Krafft-Ebbing and Freud
paves the way for sociological studies on SM. [wd]
-
1969:
Time magazine declares 1969 "The Year of the Newly Militant
Homosexual"
-
1969:
Fred Halsted meets Joey Yale at the Black Pipe, a Los
Angeles leather bar. They make the film LA Plays Itself,
with explicit SM scenes, and begin a lifelong relationship.
-
1969:
Formation of Apollos, Commanders MC, UYA MC and Wheels MC
in NYC; Border Riders MC in Seattle & Vancouver BC;
Vanguards MC in Philadelphia; Vikings MC in Boston and
the AAMC, the Atlantic Midwest Coordinating Council,
lather the Atlantic Motorcycle Coordinating Council.
In London England V Senses Rubber club becomes Rubber
Man's Club of London.
-
1969:
Newsletters are first published by several clubs: The Longship
from Vikings MC (ceases publication 1970); Innertube from V
Senses Rubber; and Tread from Wheels MC.
-
1969:
The Den bar opens in New York City.
-
1969:
The Shed becomes Boston's leather-levi bar.
-
1969:
The Leather Cell (a leather and toy shop) opens in the basement,
"The Pit", of the Gold Coast in Chicago.
-
1969, Jan:
Bob Mizer brings out Physique Pictorial Natural introducing
both color and frontal nudity to his publication. [Hooven 95]
-
1969, Jan:
Members of the Danish parliament considered a bill to
legalize marriages between homosexuals; the bill will be
defeated and reintroduced annually until it is finally
passed in 1989. [LRF]
-
1969, Feb:
The Correctional Association of New York called for an end to
the state's criminal statutes against abortion, prostitution,
and homosexuality. [LRF]
-
1969, April:
Chain Male #1, one of the BEST gay male SM/bondage photo
books is published.
-
1969, May:
Pat Rocco's nude ballet film, A Breath of Love, is accepted
for screening at the San Francisco Film Festival. [LRF]
-
1969, May:
West Germany decriminalizes male homosexual acts between men over
21. East Germany had repealed its antigay law a year earlier. [LRF]
-
1969, June:
After 32 years, the statue of David at Forest Lawn Cemetery in
Cypress, California, has its fig leaf removed. [LRF]
-
1969, June 27:
Judy Garland is buried. Memorial services are held in New York City.
-
1969, June 28:
New York City Police raid the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar on Christopher
St. near 7th Ave. triggering riots that last several nights, and
becoming the seminal event in public awareness of the fight for
gay rights.
-
1969, June 29:
"Four Policemen Hurt in Village Raid" reported the
New York Times, on page 33. [LRF]
-
1969, July:
Reporting on the Stonewall riots, Time magazine says, "The
love that once dared not speak its name now can't seem to keep
its mouth shut." [TOL]
-
1969, July 1:
US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia holds that
homosexuality does not automatically disqualify a government
employee for continuing in his job.[JR]
-
1969, July:
The Gay Liberation Front is formed in New York City. [LRF]
-
1969, Aug:
North American Conference of Homophile Organizations (NACHO)
meets, again in Kansas City. [LRF]
-
1969, Aug:
Alaska's Supreme Court rules the term "crime against
nature" unconstitutional. [LRF]
-
1969, Oct:
A National Institutes of Health Task Force on Homosexuality,
headed by Dr. Evelyn Hooker, submits its report favoring the
decriminalization of homosexuality.
-
1969, Oct:
The University of Minnesota recognizes a club for gays and
sympathizers called FREE (Fight Repression of Erotic Expression).
[LRF]
-
1996, Oct 30:
Film star Ramon Novarro is murdered in his Los Angeles mansion
by Paul and Tom Ferguson, brothers and hustlers. Paul had previously
modeled for Kris Studios. Rumor has it that the murder weapon was a
metal Dildo (gold in some stories, lead in others) given to Novaro
by Rudolph Valentino.
-
1969, Dec:
In a landmark decision the California Supreme Court rules that the
state cannot revoke a teacher's credentials over charges of
homosexual conduct. [LRF]
-
1969, Dec:
Hawaii's state Penal Revision Project recommends that private
homosexual activity be legalized. [LRF]
-
1969, Dec, 21:
Gay Activist Alliance founded in New York City.
1970
Books Published:
-
The Young Master
by William Lambert III, one of the best from this prolific
author of gay erotica with an SM twist.
-
Leather Ad V1: M and V2: S
novels by Larry Townsend.
-
Sex and the Lash Lovers
by R. Rodgers Kingman.
-
1970:
The explicitly homoerotic SM film Born to Raise Hell starring
Val Martin, produced by Terry LeGrand and directed by Roger
Earl, is released in Los Angeles. It remains a classic of the
genre to this date.
-
1970:
Publication of Cruising a murder mystery novel by Jay Green
set in New York's leather bars. When later made into a movie
starring Al Pacino it was the subject of vocal demonstrations
by gay activists who objected to the portrayals.
-
1970:
Michael Holm starts Revolt Press in Sweden. He publishes Tom of
Finland's books of artwork, and later starts Mr SM and Toy
magazines.
-
1970:
Formation of Atons of Minneapolis; Boston Bike Club; Centaur MC
of Richmond VA; Druids MC of Washington DC; Entre Nous of Boston;
The Lake Riders of Chicago; the Libertines of Kansas City; MS
Amsterdam, MSC Rhein-Main Frankfurt; MC Kemo of Montreal; PCMC
of Los Angeles; Praetorians of New York City; The San
Franciscans; South Pacific MC of Sydney; Southern Cross
MC of Melbourne; Spearhead of Toronto; TOR MC of Toronto
and Vulcan Rubber Club of Washington DC. New York First,
a council of New York motorcycle clubs is formed.
-
1970:
Spearhead holds its first Roundup run and the Vanguards hold
their first Oktoberfest. The first Leather Sabbath is held
in Washington DC.
-
1970:
Leather bar openings include: the Barn in NYC; Boots in Ft.
Lauderdale; The Cellblock in NYC, The Leather Game in Los
Angeles; The Leather Stallion in Cleveland, the Eagle's Nest,
NYC:, the Triangle in NYC.
-
1970:
Professor Louis Compton of the University of Nebraska teaches
the first gay studies course in the US. [TOL]
-
1970:
The Gay Activists Alliance selects the Greek letter lambda
(8) as a symbol of the gay movement.
-
1970, Jan:
More than 250 homosexuals, led by the Rev. Troy Perry, march
for police reform on Hollywood Boulevard in Los Angeles. [LRF]
-
1970, Jan:
Customs officials seize and seek permission to destroy,
ten artworks from an international erotic exhibit scheduled
to show in New York City. Permission is denied by a New York
court citing the First Amendment. [LRF]
-
1970, March:
A gay San Francisco postal worker fights an attempt by the
Civil Service commission to terminate him for "moral
in competency," recovering his job in November, and
paving the road for future Civil Service Commission
reforms. [LRF]
-
1970, June:
Celebrating the first anniversary of the Stonewall Riots, the
first gay pride parades/marches/rallies are held in New York,
Chicago, San Francisco and Los Angeles. Cycle MC marches in
the Christopher Street Liberation Day parade in NYC.
-
1970, July 6:
Troy Perry, founder of Metropolitan Community Church, and a
leatherman, sits on the steps of the Federal Building in Los
Angeles refusing to eat or leave until someone from the city
of Los Angeles comes and talks to him about Gay rights. Eleven
days later city Councilman Robert Stevenson holds a curbside
meeting with Perry, ending his vigil. [TOL]
-
1970, Aug:
North American Conference of Homophile Organizations (NACHO)
holds its final meeting in San Francisco. Morris Knight leads
street people in to smash NACHO. "Anarchy faced off
with arrogant conservatism, and anarchy won," says
Jim Kepner. [LRF]
-
1970, Sept:
The Federal Commission on Obscenity and Pornography urges
the repeal of most anti-pornography laws. [JR]
-
1970, Nov 25:
Yukio Mishima commits ritual suicide after a failed attempt to
incite a riot at a Military school in Japan. (Born Jan 14, 1925).
1971
Books Published:
-
All or Nothing
by Dirk Vaden, one of the most popular leather novels
of its time.
-
Run Little Leather Boy
and
The Scorpius Equation
two of Larry Townsend's best early novels.
-
The photo illustrated
History of Flagellation
in two volumes by Jon A. Peterssen.
-
1971:
The In Between opens at 1347 Folsom in San Francisco, in between
FeBe's and the Ramrod. It soon metamorphosed into the No Name, a
popular leather bar. [R]
-
1971:
The first FFA run is held in Cambria CA. [R]
-
1971:
Formation of Argonauts, Cycle Runners MC, Koalas, and LOBOC
in California; Chicago Knights MC; Keystone Riders in
Philadelphia; Kingmasters in Los Angeles, Northern Riding
Club in the UK; Scorpions MC (originally Centaur MC's DC
chapter) in DC; Thunderbolts MC in Connecticut; Tribe MC
in Detroit and Unicorns MC in Cleveland. The Boston Bike
Club disbands.
-
1971:
Runs initiated include The Centaur's Olympia, Entre Nous' Days
of Equinox and Hell-Za-Popper held jointly by Wheels and Nine Plus.
-
1971:
Leather bar openings include: the Bootcamp in San Francisco, DC
Eagle, The Ramrod in Phoenix, the Stockade in NYC and the 247
in Philadelphia.
-
1971, Jan 3:
First lesbian center in the US opens in New York City, sponsored
by the NY Chapter of the Daughters of Bilitis.
-
1971, Feb:
The Eulenspiegel Society is founded in New York City as North
America's first SM organization. It is open to all sexes and
orientations.
-
1971, Apr:
Bob Ross begins publishing the Bay Area Reporter, aka the B.A.R.,
in San Francisco. Mr. Marcus begins his leather column in this
newspaper in August of 1971. As of this writing in Jan,. 1999,
both the paper and the column are still going strong after 28
years!
-
1971, Apr 30:
Richard Chinn and John Cantrell are arrested in downtown Chicago
for kissing each other in public.
-
1971 Aug 5:
The Bootcamp, a uniform themed bar opens at 1010 Bryant St.
in San Francisco. Marcus Hernandez, aka Mr. Marcus, is
manager. [R]
-
1971, Aug 29:
Tribe M.C. (later Tribe Detroit, Inc.) founded.
-
1971, Aug:
In Chicago: Thirteen men decide to organize a group specifically
to hold gay male SM play parties and the Chicago Hellfire Club
is created.
1972
Books Published:
-
Black In White IN
by K. Kevork, Interracial gay sex with strong elements of SM.
-
A Persian Boy
by Mary Renault, a novel that follows a slave boy in the
service of Alexander the Great.
-
Punishment, An Illustrated History
by Peter N. Walker
-
The Leatherman's Handbook
by Larry Townsend, the first non-fiction book about gay
male leather lifestyles, is published.
-
1972:
The Folsom St. Barracks at 1147 Folsom St in San Francisco
is the city's first leather oriented "Bathhouse". [R]
-
1972:
Marcus Hernandez, leather bar manager and leather columnist for
The Advocate and later for the B.A.R, is selected as the first
gay Emperor of San Francisco. (Not counting the Emperor Norton,
of course.)
-
1972:
Formation of Atlantis MC (originally Unicorn/Atlanta) in Atlanta;
Atons of Minneapolis; Bucks MC in Pennsylvania; Celtics MC in
Mississippi; Hawks MC in Los Angeles; the Interclub Fund in
San Francisco; Iron Cross MC in Montreal; Knights of Malta,
Black Rose Chapter, Portland OR; Knights of Malta, Emerald
Chapter in Seattle; NY Levi Club; Omaha Meatpackers; Rainbow
MC in California; The Selectmen of Detroit, The Stallions
of Cleveland; and Titan MC of Boston.
-
1972:
Frank Ball founds TAIL, The "Total Ass Involvement
League," with members all over the world who communicate
through frequently published newsletters, and membership
rosters with carefully coded indications of sexual specifics
offered and sought.
-
1972:
Marshall Loeb begins publication of SMads, which offers gay
male subscribers a chance to place and respond to explicitly
SM personal ads.
-
1972:
Cycle MC sponsors its first tour to New Orleans for Mardi Gras.
-
1972:
Iron Cross publishes first issue of its newsletter Crossroads
and Nine Plus publishes last issue of its Scimitar.
-
1972:
Two New York leather bar institutions, the Ramrod and The Spike
(formerly the Stockade) open. Nine Plus moves to a new location
between The Spike and The Eagle.
-
1972:
Producer Terry LeGrand and Director Roger Earl make a gay male
SM film starring Val Martin and a large cast. Born to Raise
Hell is still regarded as one of the best gay male SM films
ever made.
-
1972:
R. Litman and C. Swearingen, in an article in the Archives of
General Psychiatry, describe a "bondage subculture"
in the USA. This is the first such reference to any leather
group recognized as a "subculture" in the professional
literature. [wd]
-
1972, April:
The (San Francisco) Bay Area Reporter newspaper begins publishing
a column devoted to leather related news, gossip and information
written by "Mr. Marcus," (Marcus Hernandez.) The first,
and longest running, column of its type, in 1999 it is still
going strong!
-
1972, April 4:
Atons of Minneapolis founded.
-
1972, May:
Chuck Holmes sends out his first mail order flyer for gay erotic
8mm films, one of which starred the legendary king of porn John
Holmes (no relation). The business would eventually become
Falcon, one of the biggest gay video companies in the world.
-
1972, May 2:
Death of J. Edgar Hoover, for many years the director of the
US Bureau of Investigation. For years his federal police
force had kept surveillance records on thousands of individuals
and organizations including many that were gay or engaged in
other sexual activities beyond vanilla. After his death
stories surfaced about his 44 year "friendship"
with Clyde Tolson (1900-1975) who was his right hand man
at the FBI and was his housemate outside the office. Photos
of Hoover in female drag have also appeared. It seems that
our FBI director, who could blackmail mafia dons and
presidents with ease, was both homosexual and homophobe!
-
1972, June 27:
Gay News, England's first gay newspaper, founded.
-
1972, July:
Queen's Quarterly a New York based gay male magazine includes
a very well illustrated article on the life and work of
leather/SM publisher and artist, Steve Masters in Vol 4,
#4.
-
1972, Aug:
Los Angeles police raid a HELP (Homophile Effort for Legal
Protection) monthly fundraiser at the Black Pipe, a major
leather bar. Among those arrested: HELP president Larry
Townsend. The police are surprised when the organization
fights back. Some consider this the West Coast Stonewall.
-
1972, Oct:
In a contest held at the Chicago Leather bar, the Gold
Coast, John Lunning becomes Mr. Gold Coast. The FIRST
leather titleholder.
1973
-
1973:
The American sex researchers John Gagnon and William Simon
publish Sexual Conduct: The Social Sources of Human Sexuality,
introducing the concept of "scripted behavior" into
research. [wd]
-
1973:
The US Supreme Court, ruling in Miller v. California,
defines obscenity as a violation of the community standards
in the location where it is viewed.
-
1973:
The National Gay Task Force is founded.
-
1973:
The Leather Fraternity, a contact club newsletter for leathermen
is started in Los Angeles by "Robert Payne".
-
1973:
Tom of Finland's first exhibition of original art, the
illustrations for the book, The Loggers, is held in the
back room of a sex shop in Hamburg. It is a disaster,
poorly hung, poorly lit, no sales, and most of the art
disappears.
-
1973:
Formation of the Argonauts of Wisconsin in Green Bay;
Cin City CC in Cincinnati; Colorado Riders in Denver;
Cycle men South in San Diego; Denim Guy Club in Australia;
Gateway MC in St. Louis; Kansas City Falcons MC; Loge 70
in Switzerland; Long Island Spuds, Monterey Dons in California,
MSC London in the UK; Northern Lights in Montreal; Olympian
Cycle Corps in Dallas; The Pride Chicago; Rochester Rams, NY;
Roo Bike Club, Sydney; Saddlemasters, Illinois, SF GDI;
Silver Star MC, Milwaukee; Thebans MC (Originally FLLA),
Miami; Tridents MC International and Wrangler MC Dallas.
The Mid-America (Originally MidWest) Conference of Clubs
formed.
-
1973:
Inaugural issues of newsletters: Atlantian from Atlantis MC;
The Bolt from Thunderbolt and Scene and Machine from D. B. I.
Corp, Washington DC. The latter newsletter publishes a list
of leather bars in the US, Canada and Puerto Rico. And holds
the first Mr. Scene & Machine contest at the NY Eagle--won
by Mr DC Eagle, Johnny Albert.
-
1973:
Inaugural runs: Atlantis MC's Dogwood; and Omaha Meatpacker's Rough Out.
-
1973:
The Thunderbolt's clubhouse burns.
-
1973:
The Red Star Saloon opens, it is connected to the Barracks
bathhouse, and is noted for it's sleaze, as exemplified by
its Chuck Arnette water sports ads and posters. [R]
-
1973:
Folsom Prison, a leather bar at Folsom & 14th St. opens
in San Francisco. It closes in 1977. [R]
-
1973:
Ron Johnson becomes manager of the No Name in San Francisco
and converts it into a kind of Performance Art Leather Bar
which becomes wildly popular. [R]
-
1973:
The End Up opens in San Francisco and The Interchange
Saloon opens in Detroit.
-
1973, March 3:
Two policemen shoot it out in a Sacramento, California, public
toilet after one tries to arrest the other for "oral
copulation."
-
1973, April 28:
Mid-America Conference founded during the 8'th anniversary run
of 2'nd City MC in Chicago. [RR]
-
1973, May 6:
600 protestors link hands across New York's George Washington
Bridge in a demonstration for gay rights. [TOL].
-
1973 Nov:
The Ambush opens at Harrison and Dore in San Francisco, and
attracts a unique laid back crowd of leather hippies. It
remains a unique leather bar until it closes in 1986. [R]
1974
Books Published:
-
Publication of issue #1 of Gay Bondage magazine edited
by "Tau" (Jim-Ed Thompson). Produced after
Jim Ed had convinced the House of Milan, for which he
worked as an editor of heterosexual SM titles, to try
a gay title. After three issues they are convinced
and Gay Bondage is replaced by Action Male, a magazine
of more general gay male leather interests.
-
S-M The Last Taboo
by Gerald and Caroline Greene.1974:
-
The Story of Harold
a novel by Terry Andrews, which features S/M images of
burning, is published in New York City.
-
The first issue of
Bound to Serve,
the photo magazine of gay male bondage and SM lasts for 10
issues, through 1980.
-
1974, Early:
The German physician Andreas Spengler begins a sociological study
on the German homosexual sadomasochistic subculture. [wd]
-
1974:
Rob Meijer opens RoB Amsterdam leather shop in Amsterdam.
The shop becomes legendary for it's quality and design, and
expands to become one of the leading erotic art galleries
in the world and THE leading gallery for leather male art.
-
1974:
Tom's Saloon opens in Hamburg, decorated with numerous huge photo
murals of specially commissioned Tom of Finland drawings.
-
1974:
Formation of The Alabama Celtics MC (originally Celtics MC Azalea
chapter, later Celts MC, Mobile); BALL MC (Bay Area Leather/Levi
MC), Tampa/St. Petersburg; Celtics MC, New Orleans; Corps of
Rangers, Los Angeles, Handlebar MC, Seattle; Houston MC; Ili
Holo Hawaii; International Roadmasters, Detroit; Iron Cross
MC, Los Angeles; Knights d'Orleans; Knights of Malta, Western
Chapter, Reno; The Lanyards, Toronto; The Links MC, DC;
Midland Link MSC, Worcester, UK; MSC Berlin; MSC Hamburg;
MSC Panther Koln; NY Ontario Leather Club, Buffalo, Pennine
Chain MSC, Cheshire, UK; The Philadelphians MC; Regiment of
the Black and Tans, Los Angeles; Rodeo Riders, Elkhart, IN (later
Chicago); The Shipmates, Baltimore; SLM Copenhagen; Society of
Janus, San Francisco; Sons of Apollo MC, Phoenix; Swords de
Montreal; Trash MC, NYC; and Zodiac Fraternal Society,
Vancouver BC.
-
1974:
Formation of the Mid-America Conference of Clubs in Chicago,
The Forum in San Francisco, and in Europe, ECMC, European
Conference of Motorcycle Clubs.
-
1974:
First "Let Us Entertain You" weekend sponsored by
the leather clubs of Houston on the weekend following Mardi
Gras.
-
1974:
Bar openings include: The Bike Stop in Philadelphia; Gauntlet,
NYC; The Horseshoe Saloon, DC; Munich Eagle; A/J Ranch, Harper's
Ferry WV; and the Strap, NYC.
-
1974:
Lambda Rising Bookstore opens in Washington DC.
-
1974:
The Leather Underground opens in Baltimore
-
1974:
Bella Abzug and Edward Koch become the first members of the US
House of Representatives to introduce legislation prohibiting
discrimination based on sexual orientation. [TOL]
-
1974:
Robert Opel strips naked in the Los Angeles City Council
Chambers during a meeting of the council.
-
1974:
Jim Ward, a jeweler, meets Doug Malloy a wealthy man who had
made a lifelong study of body piercings in various cultures.
They become lovers, partners, and in 1975, the founders of
the body piercing business, Gauntlet.
-
1974:
The Society of Janus is started in the San Francisco Bay area
by Cynthia Slater. It is an SM interest group open to all genders
and orientations.
-
1974:
The first World Congress of Sexuality is held in Paris. [wd]
-
1974, Feb 14:
Opening night for Doric Wilson and Peter de Valle's Off Off
Broadway theatre TOSOS (The Other Side Of Silence) with de
Valle's revue Lovers featuring a Leather couple and the song
Belt & Leather.
-
1974, Feb 14:
Fan Dancer Sally Rand performs at Man's Country Music Hall
in Chicago (she is in her 70's) setting a precedent that years
later allows for nude performances in this theatre. [Joseph,
JR's timeline says 75 Do you know which is correct?]
-
1974, Apr 2:
Robert Opel appears naked on television worldwide as he streaks
the Oscar award ceremony.
-
1974, Apr 8:
Members of the American Psychiatric Association agree with its
trustees to stop listing homosexuality as a mental disorder.
-
1974, May:
The first demonstration of gay activists in Portugal, seeking
repeal of antisodomy laws. [TOL]
-
1974, May 18:
A study conducted by the Sex Research Institute of Indiana
University recommends ending laws and harassment against
adult consenting homosexuals.
-
1974, June 21:
The last defendants in the LAPD raid of a HELP
fundraiser at the Black Pipe are cleared of all charges.
-
1974, July 19:
Los Angeles Temple Beth Chayim Chadashim (founded in 1972) is
chartered by the Union of American Hebrew Congregations becoming
the first gay religious organization to receive such official
recognition. [TOL]
-
1974: Aug:
The Society of Janus publishes it's first newsletter. It
will become the club's well known Growing Pains. [CT]
1975
-
Confessions of O, Conversations with Pauline Reage
by Regine Deforges published in France - US edition in 1979.
-
The Boy Keeper
by Carl Strater.
-
Volume 1 of the autobiography
My Life as a Masochist
by RFM (Roger Mays). Volume 2 follows in 1977.
-
Tailpipe Trucker
by Clay Caldwell.
-
A Collection of SM
edited, and partially written, by RFM This is the first,
aside from his autobiography, in a series of magazine
sized anthologies of gay male SM erotica to be published
by RFM.
-
A Book of Terms, Symbols, Abbreviations
by R.F.M. A Glossary to help in reading the
SM personal ads.
-
Discipline & Punishment, The Birth of the Prison
by Michael Foucault published in France. English edition
in 1979.
-
Robert Payne publishes a book of still photos from
the SM film,
Night of Submission.
-
Robert Payne publishes
Care and Training of the Male Slave,
the first of a series of this title.
-
The Story of O
is made into a Movie.
-
The Advocate,
the only nationally circulated Gay newspaper, is purchased
by David Goodstein and moved from Los Angeles to San Mateo,
California.
-
1975:
Pier Paolo Pasolini, poet, film maker, and political activist,
is murdered in Italy by a hustler. (Born March 5, 1922)
-
1975:
French philosopher Michel Foucault spends much of the year
teaching at Berkeley, and being thrilled by the liberated
gay sexuality he found in San Francisco, especially in the
bathhouses. He becomes particularly fascinated by
"limit-experiences" such as SM. He continued
to visit San Francisco through 1983.
-
1975:
A new edition of Terry Andrews' novel The Story of Harold is
published. This one includes illustrations by Edward Gory.
-
1975:
Formation of ASMC, American Social Mens Club, Boston; Association
Sportive Motorcycliste de France; Battalion Motorcycle Corps,
Dallas; The Blackhawk MC, Richmond VA; Black Sabbath San
Franciscans MC; Blue Max Cycle Club, St. Louis; Brothers MC,
Jacksonville; Centurion MC, SF; Chicago Cossacks Brotherhood;
Colts MC, Ft. Lauderdale, Conquistadors MC, Orlando; Elagabulus
MC, Norwood, South Australia; Excelsior MC, NYC; Five Star MC,
New Zealand; Hawaii Club, LA; Heart of Texas MC, Austin; Iron
Guard BC, NYC; Kansas City Pioneers; Knights of Malta, 49ers
Chapter, SF; Knights of Malta Stockmen's Chapter, Denver;
Militia MC, Norfolk, VA; Mini Bikers MC, New Orleans; MSC
North West, New Brighton, UK; Munchner Leder Club; Nova
NYC' Ottawa Knights; Rodeo Riders, Chicago; Rurals MC,
Roermund, Netherlands; Sierra Mountaineers, South Lake
Tahoe; Sierra Pacific Rangers; Signs of Zodiac, Detroit;
SLM Stockholm (originally SLM Sweden); Sternwheelers,
Louisville, KY; Space City MC, Houston; Sunrays MC,
Miami; Sunrays MC, Miami; Tejas MC, Houston; Trade-Winds
of Chicago; Voyagers, New Bedford, MA; Vulcan Rubber Club,
Boston Chapter; and Yorktown Levi Denim Club, Toronto. Inter
Club Fund incorporated in San Francisco and Southern Conference
of Motorcycle Clubs formed.
-
1975:
Bar openings include: The Cell Block, Philadelphia; The Chamber,
Kansas City; Hombre, SF; and Knolle, Berlin. The Exchange, a
leather shop in the Columbus OH Eagle, opens as does the
Emporium in San Francisco.
-
1975:
The Catacombs, a private club for SM and, primarily, fisting
opens in San Francisco. [R]
-
1975:
Gauntlet, a business devoted to body piercing, is started by
Jim Ward and Doug Malloy. [R]
-
1975:
Larry Townsend founds, and becomes president of the Hollywood
Hills Democratic Club, the first openly gay political club
in Los Angeles, and possibly anywhere.
-
1975, Apr 15:
Gay Students Union of UCLA presents a panel discussion on SM as
a part of Gay Awareness Week II, Fred Halsted, Joey Yale and 2
others are invited to present.
-
1975, June:
John Embry, Alternate Publishing, begins publication of
Drummer magazine.
-
1975, June 4:
Fred Halsted's film Sextool opens at the Lincoln Art Theater
in New York City at the O'Farrel Theater in San Francisco.
It will also be screened at the Museum of Modern Art in New
York and at the San Francisco Art Institute and Joey Yale,
it's star, will be featured on the cover of People magazine.
-
1975, July 4:
The Federal Civil Service Commission bans the arbitrary dismissal
of, or refusal to hire, known homosexuals.
-
1975, July:
The first Prairie Fire run jointly sponsored by 2nd City MC,
Chicago Knights MC and The Pride Chicago.[JR]
-
1975, Aug:
Robert Payne announces the film, and accompanying photo still
book, The Pledge in Drummer #2.
-
1975, Aug:
Robert Opel's "Requiem for a toolbox" in Drummer #2
is the artist's ode to the famed San Francisco leather bar.
-
1975, Aug:
Scott Masters' story "Five in the Trainer's Room"
begins serialization in Drummer #2. It runs for nine issues.
-
1975, Aug:
Robert Payne announces publication of a collection of still
photos from the film Sextool.
-
1975, Sept 8:
Leonard Matlovich appears on the cover of Time Magazine with
the bold print: "I Am a Homosexual." Len's story
broke on the front page of the New York Times and nationwide
by wire service on Memorial Day Monday of the same year.
-
1975, Sept 19:
Leonard Matlovich is discharged from the army for homosexuality.
They gave him a medal for killing a man and kicked him out for
loving one!
-
1975, Oct:
Drummer #3 includes the publication's first masthead listing
Robert Payne as Publisher, Jeannie Barney as Editor in Chief,
and V. C. Kuemmel as Art Director. And it includes the Magazine's
first centerfold, a collage of Target photos from "The
Pit" series shot in the so-named lower floor of Chicago's
leather bar, the Gold Coast.
-
1975, Oct 1:
The Story of Q by Robert Payne is first published.
-
1975, Oct 31:
Val Martin is selected "Mr. Leather" in Los Angeles
at the Hawk's annual Leather Sabbath.
-
1975, Oct 31:
The Cycle Sluts are born in Los Angeles at a "Gay Girls
Riding Club" Halloween Costume ball, a significant step in
leather gender bending.
1976
Books Published:
-
The History of Sexuality,
Volume I: An Introduction, by Michel Foucault.
-
Publication of RFM's second Collection of
SM short fiction by himself and other authors.
-
Two Bulls in a Male Harem
by Robert Fraum. This is the first in a trilogy of very
heavy SM erotic novels.
-
Mannespielen,
a portfolio of art by Rex, followed by Icons in 1977 and the
Rex calendars, published by The Trading Post, then the Mineshaft,
in later years.
-
Gay American History, Lesbians and Gay Men
in the USA by Jonathan Ned Katz, Revised edition
1992.
-
1976:
The Gage Brother's film Kansas City Trucking Co. starring Fred
Halsted and Richard Locke, is released.
-
1976:
Michael Zen's film Falconhead is released.
-
1976:
Nick O'Demus, owner of A Taste Of Leather shop upstairs at
FeBe's, opens The Trading Post at 960 Folsom in San Francisco [R]
-
1976:
Formation of Adventurers/Suncoast Florida; American Leathermen
MC of Houston; Companion MC, Philadelphia; The Connecticut
Copperheads; The Corn Haulers, Des Moines; Dallas MC; East
Anglia Bikers, UK; Falcons MC, Rhode Island; FFA-CAC, DC;
Glass City Champions (originally International Roadmasters
of Toledo); Griffin Motor Club, Canberra, Australia; Jackaroos,
Victoria, Australia; Knights of Omaha; MSC Finland; MSC
Groningen, Netherlands; New York Coordinating Committee,
Peregrine MC, Atlanta; 76ers, San Bernadino, CA; South
Pacific Rangers, SF; Silver Barons MC, Reno; The Spirits
of St. Louis; SLC Stuttgart; SLM Norway; The Tarnsmen,
Baltimore; Trojans MSC, Toronto; and Valley Knights MC,
Sacramento.
-
1976:
Bar openings include: Badlands, NYC; and The Boston Eagle.
-
1976:
The NY Eagle begins Sunday brunch and Tea Dance.
-
1976:
The Slot, a very leather "hotel" sex club, opens on
Folsom near 6th in San Francisco. And a sex club called "The
Hotel" opens in San Francisco, in 1979 it changes it's name
to the Handball Express.[R]
-
1976, Jan 1:
At a New Year's Eve party at the Second City MC clubhouse in
Chicago, Andrew Charles and Tony DeBlase, who had sighted
each other in the last few seconds of 1975, and who had been
lip locked through the transition, meet and begin what was,
as of this writing, an over 23 year partnership.
-
1976, Jan:
Full Moon Night at Larry's, Los Angeles' popular leather bar,
becomes so crowded it is changed to admission by invitation
(and reservation) only.
-
1976, Feb:
In Detroit, a jury awards $200,000 to a man who claimed
that an auto accident, in which his car was rear ended,
turned him into a homosexual. [TOL]
-
1976, March:
Drummer #5 includes the first cartoon strip by British artist
Bill Ward. The strip is titled "King".
-
1976, March:
Drummer #5 includes the first installment of "Babysitter"
by Phil Andros, with art by Chuck Arnette.
-
1976, March:
"Latrec in Leather", a collection of drawings by
Chuck Arnette, is advertised in Drummer #5.
-
1976, March:
Eons Gallery, Los Angeles' erotic art gallery has its first show:
photographs by Robert Opel.
-
1976, March 4:
Man Friday, a Broadway musical in which Friday offers his body
to Robinson Caruso, flops.
-
1976, March 8:
After long court battles in Seattle the Washington State Police
drop bars against hiring homosexuals.
-
1976, April 10:
Los Angeles Police Department raids a Slave Auction being held
at the Mark IV baths as a fundraiser sponsored by Drummer magazine.
A major case of police overkill as the resulting legal actions show.
-
1976, April 13:
San Francisco Police Chief Charles Gain urges homosexuals on
his force to come out of the closet and show that gays can be
good cops.
-
1976, June:
SM Dungeon Devices, an illustrated catalog of SM toys is
published by The Trading Post in San Francisco.
-
1976, July:
Robert Opel covers a Leather Wedding at Griff's, a popular
Los Angeles leather bar, in Drummer #7.
-
1976, July:
"Famous Sadists in History" series starts in Drummer #7.
-
1976, July:
Publication of the first issue of Package, Fred Halsted's "Journal
of Men Fact & Opinion. Lasts 6 issues, through Jan 1977.
-
1976, July:
Three gay men in Des Moines restaurant are charged with disturbing
the peace after they winked at two heterosexual men who claimed
the wink made them nauseated. [TOL]
-
1976, Sept:
A California court of Appeals orders two men who had been
arrested on lewd conduct charges for kissing in public to
register with the state as sex offenders. [TOL]
-
1976, Sept:
Chicago Hellfire Club celebrates its 5th anniversary by
holding a weekend long event featuring a Saturday night SM
party at a remote campground. Called Inferno 5, this is
first of what are to become the most infamous and exclusive
male SM play events.
-
1976, Sept:
The Gold Coast, Chicago's premier leather bar, celebrates it's
15th anniversary with a week long party detailed in Drummer #9.
-
1976, Sept:
Drummer #8 features a photo spread of the gay leather world's
best known tattoo artist, Cliff Raven, painting tattoos on Val
Martin.
-
1976, Sept:
Alan Eagles takes over the "Movie Mayhem" series in
Drummer #8 and the series takes flight.
-
1976, Sept:
"Many Happy Returns" by Phil Andros, illustrated by Chuck
Arnette, is published in Drummer #8.
-
1976, Sept:
Blueboy magazine, a Miami based gay nude glossy, publishes an SM issue
-- it is a fiasco.
-
1976, Oct:
The Cycle Sluts are featured in Drummer #9, including a cover photo
of one of the leather gender benders. Publisher John Embry, many
years later, blames this photo being responsible for one of the
worst selling issues in the magazine's history.
-
1976, Oct:
Drummer #9 includes the first "Erotic Dots", in which
the reader connects the numbered dots to reveal an, often
otherwise unprintable, drawing. This, as most but not all of
the "Erotic Dots", is by the artist Sean.
-
1976, Oct:
Drummer #9 includes the first part of the serial "The
Great SM Murder Mystery" by John Rowberry & Rue
Dyllon. The series stops, uncompleted, in Drummer #11.
This is the first time Rowberry's name appears in Drummer,
the magazine he will serve and influence over many coming
years.
-
1976, Oct 26:
The Mineshaft in New York City opens. This after-hours club
allowed and encouraged virtually all forms of sexual activity
among its hot male patrons. It was a mecca for leather/SM types
in the Eastern US and Canada. Closed in Nov 1985.
-
1976, Nov:
The cover of Drummer #10 spotlights a new artist, REX, using
a drawing he did for the Trading Post poster. But the masthead
does not yet include his name.
-
1976: Nov:
Drummer #10 features the artist Etienne, with a centerfold and
several additional pages of his artwork.
-
1976, Dec:
Drummer #11 spotlights the first Bill Ward cartoon strip under the
title "DRUM".
-
1976, Dec 1:
Willard Eugene Allen is released from a Florida mental hospital
after being incarcerated for 26 years for having sex with another
man. Although the statute under which he had been arrested had been
repealed almost 20 years earlier, state authorities had ignored
doctor's suggestions that he be released. [TOL]
1977
Books Published:
-
Publication of the first issue of
Action Male Magazine,
the successor to Gay Bondage, edited by Tau (Jim-Ed Thompson).
-
Midnight Express
by Billy Hayes, which documents his experiences in a Turkish
prison. The later movie of the same title starring Brad Davis,
while most interesting and enjoyable, differs greatly from the
book.
-
The Sexual Outlaw
by John Rechy.
-
Publication of the first issue of
Piercing Friends International Quarterly
magazine (PFIQ) by Gauntlet Enterprises, the Los Angeles based
manufacturer of piercing jewelry.
-
1977:
Formation of Ambassadors of Goodwill MC, Boston; Avengers MC
West, Claremont, CA; Black Angels Koln; The Black Guard,
Minneapolis; Boomer MC, Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia;
Force-5, Palo Alto; Friends of Leather and Denim Club of Montreal;
Guardians MC, New Haven; II MC Berlin; Lancers MC, New Orleans;
Leatheriders Bike Club, Victoria, Australia; The London Blues,
UK, MC Faucon, Montreal; Meisters der Manner, Orlando; Missouri
Association of Clubs,; Mobile Man Van Club, Detroit; MSC
Rotterdam; Nimbus Cycle Club, Grand Rapids; Nutcrackers MC,
Indianapolis; Pennsmen, Harrisburg, Phoenix Uniform Club,
SF; SLM Goteborg; SMBB International, Northampton, UK; South
Orange Bikers, Santa Ana, CA; Texas Cadre, Austin; and
Tsarus/Memphis. Colts MC of Ft Lauderdale disbands.
-
1977:
Founding of American Uniform Association (AUA) in New York City. [JWB]
-
1977:
Run premiers include First Links MC Leather Cocktails in NYC;
Lone Star in Texas; The Philadelphians Tri Cen; and Prairie
Fire, at Chicago.
-
1977:
Bar openings include Dirty Edna's Stampede, NYC; Boots, Los
Angeles; and The Brig, SF. Folsom Prison, SF, closes.
-
1977:
Peter Adair creates Word is Out, a feature film documentary
portraying gay men and lesbians in a positive light.
-
1977:
Doric Wilson's play The West Street Gang is produced in NYC.
-
1977:
The Balcony, a bar at 2166 Market St in San Francisco opens
and becomes the prime hang out for the fisting crowd. [R]
-
1977:
Art by Olaf is first published in Drummer #13.
-
1977:
"SM Gym" by G. B. Misa begins serialization in Drummer
#14 and continues through issue #28!
-
1977:
A drawing by the artist A. Jay is featured on the cover of
Drummer #15, his first appearance in the magazine he will
later art direct.
-
1977:
Art work by The Hun is first published in Drummer #15.
-
1977:
Drummer #15 includes a drawing by Skipper, depicting a hard
hat with nails etc. piercing all parts of his body. This is
the first, and one of the very few, published works by this
prolific southern California artist who focused on very violent
SM scenes.
-
1977:
Robert Payne interviews John Rechy, author of The Sexual Outlaw,
in Drummer #16.
-
1977:
A. Jay's cartoon strip "Harry Chess" begins
its run in Drummer #16.
-
1977:
Kurt Kreisler's "My Brother, My Slave" begins
serialization in Drummer # 16.
-
1977:
A folio of bondage drawings by Tom Hinde is included in Drummer #16.
-
1977:
A new edition of Robert Payne's Story of Q, beautifully illustrated
by Olaf, is published.
-
1977:
Al Shapiro, a.k.a. A. Jay, becomes Art Director of Drummer
starting with issue #17.
-
1977:
Art by Go Mishima is first published in Drummer #17.
-
1977:
"Trapped" by Houston Smith begins serialization
in Drummer #18.
-
1977:
Fist Goodbody's Traveling Torture Show, a 33 RPM record is
issued. This is a Bolero-like crescendo of male moans and
screams that is remarkably well done in spite of the
gender-bender album cover and other hype.
-
1977:
Fred Halsted begins writing a column in Drummer #18.
-
1977:
Jack Fritscher becomes Editor in Chief of Drummer beginning
with issue #19.
-
1977:
Drawings by the artist Matt first appear in Drummer #20.
-
1977:
Salo, Pasolini's film version of de Sade's 120 Days in Sodom,
is released in the US. The film includes explicit stories and
scenes of humiliation, scat, torture, and more. However even
more such scenes have been cut to get past American censors.
-
1977:
Drummer magazine moves from Los Angeles to San Francisco.
-
1977:
Photographs by David Hurles, A.K.A. Old Reliable, are first
published in Drummer #21.
-
1977:
The art of Tom of Finland is featured in a show at Robert Opel's
Feywey Studios in San Francisco. Opel interviews Tom in Drummer #22.
-
1977:
Hard Corps by Michael Grumley & Ed Gallucci is published.
-
1977:
Publication of the second part of RFM's autobiography, Life of a Masochist.
-
1977:
Angreas Spengler publishes a short English version of his
sociological study on gay sadomasochists in "Manifest
Sadomasochism of Males: Results of an Empirical Study".
This article is the foundation of modern empirical research
on SM. Spengler is the first to describe sadomasochists not
as sick individuals but as members of a sexual minority that
forms complex subcultures, thereby contradicting psychiatric
theory since Krafft-Ebing. The gay selection bias in the
study leads him to conclude that there are no female
sadomasochists, a view that will be held by psychoanalysts
and sociologists alike until 1985. [wd]
-
1977, Jan:
Jeannie Barney leaves as Editor of Drummer. John Embry's name
first appears as Publisher in issue #12.
-
1977, Jan:
Ellen Marie Barrell is ordained as an Episcopal Priest - The
first out lesbian ordained by a major Christian denomination. [TOL]
-
1977, Jan:
Eons Gallery in Los Angeles holds Tom of Finland show
and publishes the Tom of Finland 1978 calendar. Tom attends
the opening and meets Durk Dehner who would become his partner
in establishing the Tom of Finland Foundation.
-
1977, Jan: 2:
Folsom Prison, one of San Francisco's best known leather bars, closes.
-
1977, Feb 7:
US State Dept. announces it will no longer automatically bar
gays and lesbians from employment. [JR]
-
1977, Feb: 14:
Anita Bryant forms "Save our Children" to fight Miami's
gay rights ordinance, and ignites a counter movement that brought
together gay men and women in unprecedented numbers to stand up
for their rights.
-
1977, May 25:
The Everard Baths, one of New York City's best known Gay bath
houses, and one of it's most leather friendly, burns, killing
several patrons and staff.
-
1977, June 7:
Newly won gay rights legislation in Miami is rescinded following
Anita Bryant's anti-gay campaign.
-
1977, Sept:
Chicago Hellfire Club holds Inferno 6.
-
1977, Dec: 16:
The province of Quebec passes a stature banning discrimination
against gay individuals in employment, housing and public
accommodations.
1978
Books Published:
-
Sociological Perspectives on Sadomasochism
by Thomas S. Weinberg is an article is based on the concept
of "frames". [wd]
-
SM Truckers
by Clay Caldwell, one of the many gay male erotic publications
of its time, but one worthy of special attention for its
exploration of the variety of leather relationships. Six
of these stories were reprinted in Drummer #138 and 142-146.
-
9 1/2 Weeks
by Elizabeth McNeill. Published as fiction but based upon a real
life encounter. The book is much more interesting that the later,
considerably watered down, movie.
-
Behavior Modification, The Art of Mind Murdering
by Richard Camellion.
-
The first issue of
Bunkhouse,
a magazine for the Western-Levi Scene. It lasts for seven
issues through 1981.
-
"Tough Shit" begins as a regular humor feature
in Drummer #23, continuing publisher John Embry's commitment
to exposing the humorous side of leather/SM.
-
1978:
Formation of Avengers MC East, Summit, NJ; Centurions, Columbus;
Destiny MC, Miami; Eagle MC, West Palm Beach; FFA Philadelphia;
Four Star MSC Belgium; Nickel City MSC, Buffalo; Pegasus MC,
Wichita; Pennsylvania Association of Clubs; Phoenix Levi\Leather
Club; Pocono Warriors, PA; Reading Railmen, PA; Renaissance MC,
Detroit; Rough Riders MC, San Antonio; Royal Eagle, Montreal;
Samois, SF; San Francisco Wrestling Club; Scorpio Leather Club,
Holyoke; South Florida Council of Clubs; Stud MC, New Haven;
Swamp Fox MC, Columbia, SC; Toronto Motorcycle Riders; Trenton
Bulls MC; Trojans MSC, Montreal and Youngstown Exiles, OH.
Signs of Zodiac, Detroit, Disbands.
-
1978:
Bar openings include: The Arena, SF; Clementine's, St. Louis;
Half-Breed, NYC; The New Leather Loft, NYC; The Outlaw, Detroit;
Stall, Frankfurt Germany; Tiger's Paw, New Orleans; and The
Watering Hole (formerly the Roundup) SF.
-
1978:
Nine Plus clubhouse destroyed by fire in NYC.
-
1978:
The first article on "The Quarters" in San Francisco,
appears in Drummer #24. This near mythical, though for a short
time actual, training center and boarding facility for slaves,
depicted a "Drummer" ideal.
-
1978:
Drummer #24's cover photo is by Robert Mapplethorpe, who will
later become a world recognized photographer noted for exploring
SM images.
-
1978:
Drummer announces a search for Mr. Drummer, the winner to
be picked from photo submitted by those wishing to enter.
-
1978:
Drawings by Cavelo are first featured in Drummer # 27.
-
1978:
"Prison Punk" by Frank O'Rourke begins
serialization in Drummer #27.
-
1978:
Photos by Zeus studios are first published in Drummer #27.
-
1978:
Publication of Le Masochisme Au Cinema by Jean Streff, in France
-
1978:
Stompers, New York City's unique combination of boot store and
leather art gallery, holds a joint exhibit of the work of Tom
of Finland and Etienne. A later exhibit focuses on the erotic
art of Domino and Stompers publishes a catalog of his work.
-
1978:
Drawings by Domino are first published in Drummer #29.
-
1978:
The photography of Robert Mapplethorpe gets its first solo show
at Chrysler Museum.
-
1978:
Gayle Rubin moves to San Francisco to begin studies of the
gay Leatherman's culture.
-
1978:
The RoB Gallery opens in Amsterdam.
-
1978:
The Pocono Warriors are founded in eastern Pennsylvania as a
combination of the older leather/levi/motor-cycle social club
and the more current SM sex club.
-
1978:
The Arena and the Black & Blue, two leatherish bars
open in San Francisco. [R]
-
1978:
The Folsom St. Baths opens in San Francisco and by 1979 was
renamed the Sutro Baths, which is unique in having regularly
scheduled women's nights and bisexual nights. [R]
-
1978:
"Tough Customers" begins its long and popular
run in Drummer #25.
-
1978, June:
The Rainbow (Gay Pride) flag, designed by Gilbert Baker, is
flown as a decorative element at the annual gay pride parade.
It later achieved national prominence when a gay man in West
Hollywood sued his landlords because they attempted to prohibit
him from flying his flag from his balcony.
-
1978, June 13:
Gayle Rubin, Pat Califia, and 16 other female sadomasochists
found the women's SM group, Samois, in San Francisco. This is
the first known women's SM group. [wd]
-
1978, June 14:
The US Patent and Trademark Office refuses to register the
magazine name Gaysweek, on the grounds that the name is immoral. [TOL]
-
1978, June:
The Windy City Wrestling Club is reorganized with a national membership.
-
1978: July:
MAFIA (Mid-America Fists In Action) founded. Holds first
meeting at Inferno in September.
-
1978, Sept 15 - 17:
Chicago Hellfire Club hosts Inferno 7.
-
1978, Oct:
The American Uniform Association holds its first annual AUA Review. [JWB]
-
1978, Nov 27:
Harvey Milk, openly gay San Francisco Supervisor, assassinated,
along with mayor George Moscone, by former Supervisor Dan White.
1979
Books Published:
-
Rushes
by John Rechy, a novel many consider to be strongly anti-SM.
-
Project Lambda, a novel by Paul O. M. Welles.
-
Germany of MS
a novel by Christian Pierrejouan.
-
Publication of the first of a series of magazine size photo
books from Zeus studios featuring muscular men in bondage.
The series continues through 1986.
-
1979:
Andreas Spengler publishes "Sadomasochisten und ihre
Subkulturen", the German 129 page version of his study
on the sadomasochistic subculture. The detailed German text
explains that there is insufficient data to finally conclude
there are no female sadomasochists, a point lost in the English
version and subsequently on most researchers. [wd]
-
1979:
The bar formerly known as the In Between, the No Name,
and by several other names over the years is purchased by
Hank Diethelm and becomes The Brig, quickly becoming the
most popular heavy leather bar in San Francisco. It closes
in 1986 not long after Diethelm is murdered by a trick.
-
1979:
The Stables, The Watering Hole and the Trench open in San
Francisco. None has a long life but the two latter bars become
very popular with the water sports crowd. [R]
-
1979:
A sex club called the Hothouse opens at 5th and Clara in San Francisco [R]
-
1979:
Formation of Castaways MC, Milwaukee; Chicago MOB (Men of
Brotherhood); Dolphin MC, Sydney; Excalibur of New Jersey;
The Inn Men, Akron, OH; Leathermen/Atlanta; Minnesota Marauders,
Minneapolis; New World Rubbermen, Santee CA, later Port Townsend,
WA); and St. Louis Leathernecks. Northern Lights MC, Montreal
disbands.
-
1979:
The Pocono Warriors hold their first Whitewater Weekend,
which includes opportunities for whitewater rafting, and
a very well equipped dungeon space. The first organization
after Chicago Hellfire Club to formally include an SM sex
party in the activities.
-
1979:
Satyrs MC, the country's oldest, celebrates its 25th anniversary
in the Grand Ballroom of the Queen Mary, Long Beach CA.
-
1979:
The Amsterdam Eagle opens
-
1979:
The Robert Samuels gallery in New York City hosts the fifth
Tom of Finland show, the largest and most successful to date,
until the time came for payment and return of the unsold pieces.
-
1979:
"Mr. Benson" by John Preston, writing as Jack Prescot,
begins serialization in Drummer #29.
-
1979:
Hundreds of the 1978 Tom of Finland calendar are left unsold.
Durk Dehner comes up with a scheme to cut off the calendar and
sell the beautifully printed drawings as a photo set and the
Tom of Finland company is born. [Hooven 95]
-
1979:
Sasha Alyson starts Alyson Publications. Alyson is one of the
first publishers to welcome gay leather/SM works, including those
by John Preston and the lesbian SM book Coming to Power.
-
1979, Feb:
Britain's Queen Elizabeth II is named an "honorary man"
by hosts during a visit to the Persian Gulf so "he"
could visit areas barred to women. [TOL]
-
1979, May:
David Kloff, of San Francisco, is named the first International
Mr. Leather at the contest in Chicago. Durk Dehner, of Los
Angeles, is First Runner Up.
-
1979, May 21:
Dan White convicted only of voluntary manslaughter in the killing
of Milk and Moscone. The conviction results in the White Night
riots by gay men in San Francisco.
-
1979, June:
Drummer # 30 features Jack Fritscher's "Meditations on
Arthur Tress" including several photos by this very
homoerotic, and leather suggestive, photographer.
-
1979:
John Rowberry replaces Jack Fritscher as Editor of Drummer,
starting with issue # 31.
-
1979:
Drawings by Dirk Dykstra, A.K.A. "Lazy Leo" &
"Leo Ravenswood," first published in Drummer #31.
-
1979:
It is a year for leather shops openings in San Francisco.
Leather Forever and Leather World open in the Castro district.
And in the Folsom area Taylor of San Francisco opens on
Clementina, and Alan Selby opens Mr. S Leather on 7th
between Folsom & Howard.
-
1979:
Bette Midler records My Knight in Black Leather. [R]
-
1979, June:
"Dykes on Bikes" make their first appearance in a Pride
Day Parade, in San Francisco. [TOL]
-
1979, July 7:
Rod's (bar) opens in Madison WI. Not strictly a leather bar,
but leather friendly and for years the best there is in Madison.
-
1979, July 8:
Robert Opel shot and killed by a hold-up man at his Feywey
Studios, 1287 Howard St., San Francisco.
-
1979, Sept 14 -16:
Chicago Hellfire Club's Inferno 8 goes to a two night SM party
and Tony DeBlase creates a schedule of demonstrations, contests,
and a flea market to fill the intervening day. It is covered
extensively with text and photos by John Preston and Tony DeBlase
in Drummers #34 and 35. This is the first real publicity on Inferno.
-
1979, Oct 14:
The first Lesbian and Gay March on Washington. Over 100,000 attend.
-
1979, Oct 30:
A Different Light Bookstore opens in Los Angeles, they will
be the first bookstore to have a separate Leather/SM section.
-
1979, Nov:
DungeonMaster a newsletter of male SM techniques, starts
publication. Fledermaus, a.k.a. Tony DeBlase, publisher,
editor, etc. He uses the phrase "Safe and Sane
S&M" to describe its subject matter.
-
1979, Dec 1:
Bent a play by Martin Sherman about the prosecution of gays
in the Nazi concentration camps opens on Broadway.
1980
Books Published:
-
What Color is Your Handkerchief
by Samois. This anthology on SM was the precursor to
Coming to Power.
-
Harry Chess Vol. 1
a magazine sized book collection of the wonderful witty cartoon
strips by A. Jay.
-
Waiting for the Barbarians
by J. M. Coetzee, an unnerving novel of torture and
the "other".
-
The Lords of Discipline
by Pat Conroy. The ritual of hazing gone awry in a Military School.
-
Mr. Benson
by John Preston in book form.
-
Old Time Punishments
by William Andrews. Stocks, pillories, dunking stools, etc.
-
The Barn 1948 And More Dirty Pictures
by Blade, a catalog published jointly by Stompers and
Leslie-Lohman gallery.
-
Top Comedy & Bottom Burlesque
a collection of cartoons on SM by Bruce N. Duncan.
-
Folsom magazine,
published by photographer Jim Moss. It lasts for four issues.
-
1980:
Formation of Bacchus, St. Louis; Blackhawks MC, Rock Island IL;
Centurions LL MC Roanoke, VA; FFA of Miami; The 15 Association, SF;
The Foot Fraternity, Gulf Coast Buccaneers MC, Mississippi;
HyBreeds of Rochester, NY; National Association of Black
and White Men Together; Northern Lights, Edmonton, Alberta;
Renaissance Men, Detroit; SMBB International/Australia, NSW;
Stingrays MC, West Palm Beach, and Sundance Cattle Co., Houston.
-
1980:
Bar openings include CCW, Detroit; J's Bar, NYC, and Rawhide,
NYC. DC Eagle moves to 7th St. NW.
-
1980:
Silver Anchor Enterprises, Inc. begins piercing jewelry business
out of Ft. Lauderdale.
-
1980:
Publication of the first issue of Mach magazine by Alternate publishing.
-
1980:
Val Martin is named the first Mr. Drummer by publisher John
Embry. Entered in International Mr. Leather he places as
first runner up.
-
1980:
The American Sociologist G. W. Levi Kamel theorizes that gay
sadomasochists develop their interests in a six step
"career" that begins with a disenchantment with
the vanilla gay community. [wd]
-
1980:
The American woman's rights group National Organization for
Women (NOW) publishes their "Delineation of Lesbian
Rights Issues "confirming every women's right to the
"actualization of her sexuality" but excluding
sadomasochism. NOW states that including sadomasochism
would "violate the feminist principles" on
which it was founded, and claim that sadomasochists are
trying to "provide a premeditated structure for
violence". [wd]
-
1980:
Cruising, a movie staring Al Pacino, depicting murder and
violence in Leather bars and among leather men, opens in New
York City, to loud protests by gay demonstrators.
-
1980, Feb:
The 15 Association formed in San Francisco by David Lewis and
others. It is an all male group dedicated to SM activity.
-
1980, March 21:
Cynthia Slater & Susan Thoraen rent the Catacombs for
the first mixed gender, mixed orientation SM play party. It
is a success and the parties continue until the Catacombs
closes. [R]
-
1980, Apr 18:
The lesbian community in San Francisco holds a public
debate on sadomasochism. This is the first known public
debate on lesbian sadomasochism. [wd]
-
1980, May:
Patrick Brooks of Australia is named the second International
Mr. Leather at the contest in Chicago.
-
1980, Aug:
Brian O'Dell publishes a letter in New York City's Gay Community
News which leads to the formation of GMSMA.
-
1980, Aug 8 - 10:
Chicago Hellfire Club's Inferno 9 is held near Chicago. It is
the year of the "Gang of Four" but all goes well.
-
1980, Sept:
Dungeon Master #6 includes the phrase "safe and sane
scenes" to describe the objectives of the Safety Valve
column. "Safe and Sane S&M" is a phrase often
used in subsequent issues to describe the objectives of the
publication.
-
1980, Oct:
Jack Fritscher begins publication of his little magazine Man2Man,
which lasts for eight issues.
-
1980, Nov 10:
A homophobic man fires an Uzi into the crowded Ramrod bar on
West Street in New York City, killing one and injuring many leathermen.
-
1980, Dec:
Gay Male S/M Activists officially organized in New York City,
and holds it's first public meeting on January 14.
1981
Books Published:
-
Coming to Power,
a collection of articles on SM, is published by the San Francisco
based women's SM organization Samois.
-
Whitewater Run
by Victor Terry, a fictionalized portrayal of the Pocono
Warriors Whitewater Weekend Run.
-
Anal Pleasure & Health,
by Jack Morin Ph.D. a guide for both men and women.
-
Aaron Travis' most famous short story,
"Blue Light,"
in Drummer #44.
-
1981:
Formation of Colorado Gay Rodeo Association, Confederation of
New York Area Clubs, Florida Brotherhood of Clubs, Lesbian Sex
Mafia (LSM) in New York City, Orlando; GMSMA, NYC; Satyricons
MC, Las Vegas; SMGays, London; Stillettos, Jacksonville, FL;
and Stingrays, NJ. Elegabulus NC, Norwood Australia, and South
Florida Council disband.
-
1981:
Bar openings include Spike, Munich and Stellwerk, Berlin.
Buddy Bar in Berlin and Tiger's Bar in New Orleans close.
-
1981:
The Drummer Key Club, a male leather version of the Playboy
clubs, opens at Folsom & 11th in San Francisco. Advertised
as the first of a nationwide chain, others never open, and
quickly evolves into a series of more typical leather bars:
Drummaster, then the Gold Coast, and finally the Compound,
a private sex club which closed in 1984. [R]
-
1981:
San Francisco Eagle founded. At the time it was just one of
the many leather bars in the city, but it has endured to
become the oldest leather bar in San Francisco.
-
1981:
Death of Tony Taverossi, one of the inventors of the leather bar,
from AIDS related pneumonia.
-
1981:
Advocate reporter Randy Shilts becomes the US's first out
gay reporter at a major daily newspaper when he is hired by
the San Francisco Chronicle. [TOL]
-
1981, June:
Ray Pereyra is named the second Mr. Drummer in the first
Mr. Drummer Contest.
-
1981, April 4:
A performance art space named, and located at, 544 Natoma,
opens in San Francisco. The performance pieces, including
play parties, are usually leather oriented and feature
members of the Rainbow MC. It closes on 6 October 1983. [R]
-
1981, May:
Marty Kiker is named the third International Mr. Leather at
the contest at Chicago.
-
1981, June 5:
Morbidity & Mortality Weekly, announces the mysterious
presence of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in five gay men
in Los Angeles.
-
1981, July 3:
The New York Times publishes the first article on "the Gay
Cancer", the first public news of what was to become known
as AIDS.
-
1981, July 10:
A major fire on Folsom St. destroys homes (and art and photos
and whips, etc.) of Rex, Mark I. Chester, and many other leathermen.
-
1981, Aug 28:
Steve McEachern has a heart attack at the Catacombs while
engaged in a private scene with his lover. He dies and
the Catacombs closes.
-
1981, Sept:
Chicago Conference of Clubs holds first Wild Onion run near Chicago.
-
1981, Oct:
German SM-lesbians meet and decide to create address distribution
centers in various cities as a form of infrastructure. This is
the first known attempt at organization among German SM-lesbians. [wd]
-
1981, Oct 9-12:
Chicago Hellfire Club holds Inferno 10 under canvas at a new
location in Douglas MI on Columbus Day weekend. It is too cold
for outdoor nudity! Bill Kerr of New York City receives the
first Caligula Award.
-
1981, Oct 10:
Torch Song Trilogy by Harvey Fierstein opens on Broadway.
-
1981, Oct 30:
The Catacombs #2 opens at 736 Larken in San Francisco. [R]
-
1981, Dec:
GMSMA holds its first Bizarre Bazaar at the Mineshaft in New York City.
-
1981. Dec:
The New York City Gay Men's Chorus performs at Carnegie Hall,
the first openly gay group to appear there. [TOL]
1982
Books Published:
-
The Rose Exterminator
by William Carney, an essentially unsuccessful sequel to
The Real Thing.
-
The Fledermaus Anthology
by Larry Townsend, a collection of explicitly gay male
SM short stories by Tony DeBlase writing as Fledermaus.
-
The Mack Anthology
by Larry Townsend, featuring the fiction and superb erotic
art of Mack.
-
The Enema as an Erotic Art and it's History
by David Barton-Jay. A coffee table book on enemas!
-
A History of Erotic Literature
by Patrick J. Kearney.
-
Against Sadomasochism: A Radical Feminist Analysis
by R. E. Linden is published in San Francisco.
-
1982:
Formation of Conductors LLC, Nashville; Corpus Christi MC;
County Men, Detroit; dreizehn, in Boston; Gaucho MC, Tampa;
Harbor Masters, Portland, ME; Leathermasters Inc., LA; Rainbow
MC in San Francisco; Somandros, LA; Trident International Detroit;
and Tower City Corps, Cleveland, and Vancouver Activists in SM,
VASM, in Vancouver, BC.
-
1982:
Rainbow MC founded in San Francisco. Rainbow differs from most
other contemporary gay motorcycle clubs in two ways: most of
its members were involved in the visual and/or performing arts
and it's events were usually art "happenings" But
it's members also harkened back to the outlaw biker gangs in
appearance, forbidding fancy uniforms or washing of overlays,
which were frequently decorated with bodily secretions. [R]
-
1982:
The Danish SM-activist Maria Marcus' book on SM is translated
into German as Die furchtbare Wahrheit. Frauen und Masochismus. [wd]
-
1982:
Release of the film Conan the Barbarian which opens with a shot
of a nearly naked Arnold Schwarzenegger, as Conan, nailed, crucifix
style, to a huge and gnarled tree. He tears himself free from the
nails. The movie is filled with other SM images.
-
1982: Feb 13:
The Catacombs #3 opens on Shotwell St in San Francisco. [R]
-
1982: Feb 25:
Wisconsin becomes the first state in the union to have comprehensive
gay rights legislation.
-
1982, May:
Luke Daniel, Mr. Drummer, is selected as the 4th International Mr.
Leather at the contestant Park West in Chicago.
-
1982, June:
Luke Daniel of Los Angeles is named as the third Mr. Drummer.
-
1982, Aug:
Dr. Tom Waddel brings together thousands of gay men and
women for the first Gay Games. Originally called the Gay
Olympics the US Olympic Committee brings suit to protect
their name. Hundreds of events around the world are called
"Olympics" but only the Gay Olympics has been singled
out for such prohibitions.
-
1982, Sept 10-13:
Chicago Hellfire Club returns to September dates and holds
Inferno 11 on two sites in Douglas and Saugatuck, MI. Ken
Hocking of Sydney Australia receives the Caligula Award.
-
1982, Oct:
Vancouver Activists in SM, a male SM group, is formed in
Vancouver, British Colombia.
-
1982, Oct 25:
Northern Ireland repeals its laws against sodomy. [TOL]
-
1982, late:
Mixed Gender SM play parties resume at the Shotwell Catacombs
in San Francisco. [R]
1983
Books Published:
-
The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty,
an explicitly sexual and SM filled novel, is published by a major
publisher, who admits that the author's name, A. N. Roquelaure,
is a pseudonym for a very well known female author, much later
revealed to be Ann Rice. This is the first volume of what will
become the Sleeping Beauty trilogy.
-
Sadomasochism. Studies in Dominance and Submission
by the American sociologists Thomas A. Wienberg and G. W.
Levi Kamel. The book summarizes the historical research on
SM and promotes the empirical sociological viewpoint. [wd]
-
The Correct Sadist
by Terence Sellers.
-
1983:
Formation of Avatar, LA; Cowtown Leathermen, Ft. Worth; Dreizehn,
Boston; Gryphons MC, Dayton, OH; Leather and Lace, LA; Lords of
Leather, New Orleans; Manchester Super Chain, UK; and Tower City
Corps, Cleveland.
-
1983:
Samois, the nation's first women's SM organization, disbands
in San Francisco.
-
1983, May:
Colt Thomas of Houston TX is named the fourth International
Mr. Leather at the contest at Park West in Chicago.
-
1983, June:
John Garger is chosen 1983 Mr. Drummer at a contest held at
the Russian River in northern California. First runner up
David Earl Lee, later assumes the title.
-
1983, July 14:
Massachusetts congressman Gerry Studds comes out as a gay
man in a speech to the House, following charges linking him
with a male page.
-
1983, Aug 17:
An ad-hoc committee of GMSMA issues a report: "Proposed New
Statement of Identity and Purpose" using the phrase "safe,
sane, consensual." [GK]
-
1983, Sept 9 - 12:
Chicago Hellfire Club holds Inferno 12 in Douglas MI. Ron Bentley of
Midland, Texas, receives the Caligula Award.
-
1983, Sept:
Publication in London of the first issue of SMART, A journal
of SM how-to modeled after DungeonMaster. It lasts for three issues.
-
1983, Oct:
GMSMA switches its meeting site to the new New York City Lesbian
& Gay Community Services Center.
1984
Books Published:
-
Urban Aboriginals
by Geoff Mains
-
Leather Blues -The Adventures of Denny Sergeant
by Jack Fritscher
-
Corporal in Charge of Taking Care of Captain O'Malley
a collection of short stories, by Jack Fritscher.
-
Beauty's Punishment
by A. N. Roquelaure (Anne Rice), the second of the Beauty trilogy.
-
The Mineshaft
a novel by Tim Barrus.
-
The Raging Peace
by Artemis Oakgrove, the first in the Throne Trilogy of lesbian
leatherish erotica.
-
The Brig
by Mason Powel, a novel which had been previously
serialized in Drummer.
-
1984:
Formation of Arizona Gay Rodeo Association; California Eagles,
SF; Copperstate Leathermen, Phoenix; Defenders of Mithra, Portland,
OR; Disciples of De Sade, Dallas; GLSM Hamburg; Golden State Gay
Rodeo Association; Grand Rapids Rivermen; The great Midwestern
Society for the Promotion and Proliferation of S&M; On
Motor Club, Paris; The Outcasts, SF; Pittsburgh MC; Severn
Link MSC, Bristol, UK; SigMa, DC; Tridents MC, Boston; Two
Wheelers, Omaha; and Wasatch Leathermen MC, Salt Lake City.
-
1984:
The American medical philosopher Frederick Suppe shows that
all diagnosis included in the diagnostic groups of
"paraphilias" (perversions) can be substituted
by other, non-sexual diagnosis. He concludes that the current
classification of sexual disorders by the American Psychiatric
Association in DMS-III is Amerely the codification of social
mores". [wd]
-
1984:
An exhibit titled "Eldorado -- Homosexual Women and Men
in Berlin 1850 - 1950, History, Everyday Life, and Culture:"
opens at the Schwules Museum in Berlin. This is the first known
museum exhibition centering on homosexuality.
-
1984:
Lady Thorn sponsors her first Bizarre Flea Market in San Francisco.
-
1984:
San Francisco closes bath houses and sex clubs in an effort
to limit the spread of AIDS. [R]
-
1984, Jan:
Staff writers at the Wall Street Journal were first allowed
to use the word "gay" instead of "homosexual". [TOL]
-
1984, Apr 21:
"Farewell Catacombs, Fuck You World!" party held at
the Catacombs as its final event. [R]
-
1984, May:
Ron Moore of Denver becomes the 6th International Mr. Leather
at the contest at Park West in Chicago. He is the first black
man to hold an international leather title. Died: Feb 25, 1997.
-
1984, June:
Sonny Cline of San Francisco becomes the 1984 Mr. Drummer at
the contest in San Francisco.
-
1984, June:
GMSMA organizes its first Leather Pride Night in New York City.
-
1984, June 25:
Michael Foucault dies at the age of 57 of AIDS in Paris, France. [wd]
-
1984, Sept 7 - 10:
Chicago Hellfire Club holds Inferno 13 in Douglas MI. David
Lewis of Dallas receives the Caligula Award.
-
1984, Sept:
The first Folsom Street Fair is held in San Francisco.
-
1984, Oct 5-8:
American Uniform Association 7th Annual Review is held in Denver.
1985
Books Published:
-
Beauty's Release
the third in the Beauty trilogy by A. N. Roquelaure (Anne Rice).
-
Exit to Eden
by Anne Rampling, which turns out to be another pseudonym for
Anne Rice. Slaves of the Empire by Aaron Travis in book form
after being serialized in Drummer.
-
Physical Interrogation Techniques
by Richard W. Krousher. A how-to manual for
interrogation & torture.
-
Torture
by Edward Peters.
-
Torture in Brazil a secret study by the Archdiocese of
Sao Paulo,
English edition in 1986.
-
1985:
Formation of Hartford Colts; Krew de Cuir, SF; Men in Boots,
Vancouver BC; MSC Iceland; PEP, Phoenix; River City Outlaws,
San Antonio; Seattle Dungeon Guild; Texas Renegades, Houston;
and Total Devotion and Alliance Club of Atlanta.
-
1985:
People Exchanging Power (PEP) an SM club open to all
genders and orientations is founded in Phoenix by Nancy
Ava Miller, who goes on to found several similar organizations
across the country.
-
1985:
The Tom of Finland foundation, a not for profit corporation
formed to preserve the art of Tom of Finland, and to promote
erotic art and artists, is founded in Los Angeles.
-
1985:
The Defenders of Mithra begin sponsorship of the Oregon State
Leather Woman title.
-
1985:
Norman Breslow and colleagues become the first researchers
to report the existence of non-prostitute female sadomasochists.
Their results, which contradict one of the most cherished beliefs
among Freudians, behaviorists, and sociologists are not accepted
by the research community until the late 1990's [wd]
-
1985:
The Fraser Report, Report of Special Commission on Pornography
and Prostitution is issued in Canada. It sets three tiers of
"obscenity". Sexually violent or "degrading"
activities are deemed worse than everything except child pornography.
-
1985:
Leon Golub retrospective at the Museum of Contemporary Art in
Chicago. Golub's subject matter is larger than life size canvases
of instances of torture, often based on actual cases.
-
1985:
Artist Daniel Kelly retrospective at Corsh Gallery in Chicago.
Kelly's art blends religious, sexual and S/M themes.
-
1985:
Peter Thomas begins his lengthy service as Coordinator of the
Mid America Conference of Clubs. [RR]
-
1985, Jan:
The first Mr. Mid-Atlantic Leather contest held in Washington DC.
Sponsored by Centaur MC.
-
1985, May 12:
A pink granite memorial to the homosexual victims of Nazi
concentration camps is unveiled in Germany.
-
1985, May:
Patrick Toner of San Francisco becomes the 7th International Mr.
Leather at the contest at the Park West in Chicago.
-
1985, June:
Steve Reiswig of Seattle becomes the 6th Mr. Drummer at the
contest in San Francisco.
-
1985, June 29:
The French National Assembly passes a bill prohibiting discrimination
against gay men and lesbians.
-
1985, July:
Ringold Alley, a favorite nighttime cruising ground for
leathermen, is the site of the first Ringold Alley Fair,
a charity fundraiser sponsored by Up Your Alley Productions,
a group in which IML 85 Patrick Toner plays a very prominent
role.
-
1985, Sept 6 - 9:
Chicago Hellfire Club holds Inferno 14 in Douglas MI. Harold
Cox of Wilkes Barre, PA, receives the Caligula Award.
-
1985, Nov:
The Mineshaft is closed by New York City officials for
"health" reasons.
-
1985, Nov 11:
GMSMA holds its first Leatherfest in New York City.
-
1985, Nov 13:
Nargret Roff, an out lesbian, is elected Mayor of Manchester
England. The first out gay or lesbian to be elected to mayoral
office in Great Britain.
1986
Books Published:
-
Sexual Magic,
a collection of SM photographs together with thoughts about SM
by the subjects of the photos, most of whom are members of the
SM organization Janus, is self published by San Francisco
photographer Michael A. Rosen.
-
Sex Magick,
a collection of poems by Ian Young is published in Toronto
-
Publication of
The Sexual Perspective, Homosexuality and Art in
the last 100 years in the West
by Emmanuel Cooper, Second Edition 1994.
-
1986:
Formation of Bournemouth LSMC, UK; Club Mud, Rio Nido, CA;
Essex Leather MSC, UK; Der Ledermeister, Syracuse NY; The
National Leather Association, Seattle; Portland Power and
Trust, OR; and Utica Tri's NY.
-
1986, Jan 10:
GLAAD, Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation is
established in New York City.
-
1986:
Portland Power and Trust, a woman to woman SM organization is
formed in Portland Oregon by Sallee Huber, Sashie Hyatt, and
Judy Tallwing McCarthy.
-
1986:
Lee Willis begins The Studworks in Seattle and quickly becomes
recognized as the foremost artisan at creating studded leather work.
-
1986:
The film
9 & 1/2 Weeks
directed by Adrian Lyne, staring Kim Basinger and Mickey Rourke
opens in the USA. [wd]
-
1986, May:
Scott Tucker, of Philadelphia is selected as the 8th International
Mr Leather at the contest at the Park West in Chicago. Jim Ed
Thompson, former editor of Gay Bondage and Action Male, is first
runner up.
-
1986, Apr 15:
Death of French writer Jean Genet who had spent most of his
adolescence and young adulthood in prison. A prolific writer
his works were filled with raw sexuality, often with SM
overtones. Examples are his play The Balcony and the novels
A Thief's Journal, Our Lady of the Flowers, and Querelle of
Brest. (Birth: Dec 19, 1910)
-
1986, June:
Mike Murray of San Diego becomes the 7th Mr. Drummer at the
contest in San Francisco.
-
1986, June:
The National Leather Association is formed in Seattle by Steve
Maidhof with the help of a few other leather men and women.
-
1986, June 30:
The US Supreme Court upholds Georgia's sodomy laws in a
5-4 ruling on the conviction of Michael Hardwick for activities
that took place in the privacy of his own bedroom.
-
1986, July 4:
New Zealand passes a homosexual law reform bill extending basic
rights to gay men and lesbians.
-
1986, Aug 22:
Desmodus Inc. (Tony DeBlase & partner), publisher of
DungeonMaster, purchases Drummer, Mach, and Foreskin Quarterly
magazines from Alternate Publishing (John Embry). Desmodus
relocates from Chicago to San Francisco.
-
1986, Sept 5 - 8:
Chicago Hellfire Club holds Inferno 15 at Douglas MI. John
Enteman of New York City receives the Caligula Award.
-
1986, Oct:
The first Living in Leather Conference is hosted in Seattle by
the newly formed National Leather Association.
-
1986, Nov:
GMSMA spearheads organizing a special Leather-S/M contingent for
the 1987 March on Washington.
-
1986, Fall:
Seattle Leather Woman title begins.
-
1986, Fall:
In a literature survey from 1977 to 1984, Breslow and colleagues
can only find five empirical studies on sadomasochism. Of these,
only one study (Spengler 1977) gives enough data to be evaluated
or replicated. In their own study on male sadomasochists, Breslow
and colleagues point out that there is no data that would justify
subdividing sadomasochists into groups such as sadist and masochist
based on role preference. [wd]
1987
Books Published:
-
The Green Hotel
by Gordon Hoban writing as Tom Hardy.
-
Hell's Angels
by Yves Lavigne
-
Slavery in the Arab World
by Murray Gordon in France, first American edition 1989
-
The Sexologist
by Charles Moser and psychologist Eugene E. Levitt publish the
results of an empirical study on sadomasochists. [wd]
-
1987:
Formation of Boston Ducks; Diablo DV8's, Walnut Creek CA;
Firedancers LLC, Dallas; Griffins MC, DE; and Trident
International LA.
-
1987:
First International Gay Rodeo Association (IGRA) Finals Rodeo.
-
1987:
The British police conclude Operation Spanner with the arrests
of several gay men participating in a private party where
consensual SM was going on.
-
1987:
Desmodus Inc. and Zeus Studios jointly publish a volume of still
photos from Chicago Hellfire Club's Inferno 15.
-
1987:
The Schwules Museum in Berlin begins publication of Capri,
a periodical dedicated to gay history.
-
1987:
The German SM-group Suendikat Hamburg is formed. By 1995, it
will have about 100 members, roughly half of them women. This
is the first known heterosexual SM group in Germany. [wd]
-
1987, Feb 2:
First Portland Leather Woman contest won by Judy Tallwing McCarthy.
-
1987, Feb 11:
Death of D. Lyn Sterling, known as "The Leathermaker".
He originated many unique designs in leather clothing (and toys),
including chaps with the zippers on the outside! and was for many
years Leathermaker to the stars in Los Angeles. [LJ 93]
-
1987, Mar. 21:
Judy Tallwing McCarthy of Portland, OR, is named the first
International Ms Leather at the contest in San Francisco.
-
1987, Mar. 24:
The newly formed ACT UP holds its first demonstration in New York City.
-
1987: Mar. 25:
Robert D. Reite begins SM Board in Los Angeles, one of the
first telephone bulletin boards specifically catering to SM
men. SM board is now accessible by Direct dial, telnet, and
the World Wide Web. it celebrated it's 10th anniversary in 1997.
-
1987, May:
David Rhodes begins publication of The Leather Journal in Los Angeles.
-
1987, May:
The National Leather Association holds its first May Day conference
in Seattle. T. K. Cuellar is named the first Mr. National Leather
Association and Jan Brown of Vancouver BC is named the first Ms
National Leather Association.
-
1987, May:
Thomas Karasch of Hamburg, Germany, is named the 9th International
Mr. Leather at the contest at the Park West in Chicago.
-
1987, June:
Mark Alexander of Los Angeles becomes the 8th Mr. Drummer at
the contest in San Francisco.
-
1987:
Following the traffic of leathermen cruising, Up Your Alley
moves it's San Francisco leather charity street fair from
Ringold Alley to Dore Alley, across from the Powerhouse.
-
1987, Aug 1:
The first Mr. & Ms Vancouver BC Leather Contest is held.
-
1987, Aug 7:
Over a hundred people protest a British law against same sex
hand holding and other public displays of affection by
holding a "kiss-in" at London's Piccadilly
Circus. [TOL]
-
1987, Aug 28-31:
NLA's Living In Leather II is held in Seattle. Tony DeBlase
of San Francisco, and Susie Bright of Denver, are named NLA
Man and Woman of the year.
-
1987, Sept:
Chicago Hellfire Club holds Inferno 16 in Douglas MI. Robin
Tutt of Fire Island Pines, NY, receives the Caligula Award.
-
1987, Oct 10:
A National Leather Conference is held in Washington DC on
the day before the March. Barry Douglas of GMSMA is the prime
organizer, NLA organizes the panels. Judy Tallwing McCarthy gives
keynote address. Thousands attend and the next day March, for the
first time, behind a banner using the phrase
"Safe-Sane-Consensual".
-
1987, Oct 11:
Hundreds of thousands, including thousands of leather people
of all orientations, march and rally in Washington DC for the
1987 March on Washington for Lesbian and Gay rights.
1988
Books Published:
-
The Lesbian SM Safety Manual
edited by Pat Califia.
-
The Tom of Finland Retrospective
a coffee table book on Tom's art and life.
-
Publication of
First Hand Events
#1 in magazine format, featuring the International Mr. Leather
contest. #2, also published in 1988 covers the Gay Rodeo circuit.
No further issues were published.
-
Ecclesia Militans, The Inquisition by Miroslav Hroch
and Anna Skybova in Germany
English edition in 1990.
-
1988:
Formation of Atlanta S&M Solidarity (ASS); COMMAND,
Baltimore; Panthers L/L, Atlanta; Gay Male S/M Cooperative
(GMSMC), Philadelphia; New York Bondage Club; and Southbay
Leather and Uniform Group (SLUG), San Jose. Knights Templar,
SF, disbands.
-
1988:
Jaye Evans opens the Atlanta Eagle as the first definite leather
bar in that city.
-
1988:
Establishment of the Human Sexuality Collection at
Cornell University Library. David B. Goodstein,
longtime publisher of The Advocate, and Bruce Voeller,
early leader of the National Gay Task Force, are the
driving forces behind its creation. The Mariposa Education
and Research Foundation donated it's huge collection of
papers, photographs, art, films, etc. to form the core
of the new Cornell collection.
-
1988:
John Stout, a gay man living in West Hollywood, wins a legal
battle with his landlord over his right to fly a rainbow flag
from his apartment balcony. [TOL]
-
1988, Jan:
Desmodus Inc. publishes the first issue of The Sandmutopia
Guardian and Dungeon Journal, a SM how-to publication similar
to DungeonMaster but written for all genders and sexual orientations.
Carol Truscott is editor.
-
1988, Feb:
Barry Douglas of New York City and Cookie Andrews-Hunt of
Seattle are named the Leather Journal man and woman of the
year. These are the Leather Journal's first such awards and
the beginning of what will grow into the Pantheon of Leather
awards.
-
1988, Feb:
Lambda Delta Lambda at the University of California, Los Angeles,
becomes the first lesbian sorority to gain official recognition
from a US college or university. [TOL]
-
1988, Feb 10:
The Gold Coast, Chicago's best known leather bar, closes after
28 years of operation.
-
1988, Feb 13:
A conference of Leather-S/M men and women is held in Dallas,
an outgrowth of the Oct '87 conference in Washington DC. It's
purpose is to organize a national organization. After two days
of heated debate a statement of purpose and some organizational
guidelines are adopted, and a steering committee is elected.
The group begins functioning under the name Safe Sane Consensual
Adults, SSCA.
-
1988, Feb 24:
Lambda Delta Lambda, the first lesbian sorority in America
is officially recognized by UCLA. One month later, the first
(admittedly) gay college fraternity will be formed.
-
1988, March:
Shan Carr of Portland, Oregon, is selected as the second
International Ms Leather at the contest in San Francisco.
-
1988, May:
NLA's May Day Conference in Seattle, Steve Maidhof and Cheri
Mattise are selected as Mr. and Ms NLA.
-
1988, May:
Dave Pallone, a 10 year veteran National League umpire is
fired because of his homosexuality.
-
1988, May:
Michael Pereyra of San Diego becomes the 10th International Mr.
Leather at the contest at the Vic Theatre in Chicago.
-
1988, June 21:
Art Agnos, Mayor of San Francisco, Declares Alan Selby Day
to honor the man often called the "Mayor of Folsom St."
-
1988, Aug:
GMSMA establishes the Hocutt-Ferguson fund to assist leather people
with AIDS.
-
1988, Sept 24:
The Mr. Drummer contest is switched from the June Gay Pride
weekend to coincide with the Folsom Street Fair in September.
In advertising Tony DeBlase begins calling it "San Francisco
Leather Pride Weekend". Ron Zehel of Columbus, OH becomes the
9th Mr. Drummer.
-
1988, Sept:
Chicago Hellfire Club holds Inferno 17 in Douglas MI. Wally
Wallace of New York City, receives the Caligula Award.
-
1988, Oct 8-10:
NLA's Living in Leather III Conference is held in Seattle. Alan
Selby and Gayle Rubin, both of San Francisco, are named NLA man
and woman of the year.
-
1988, Oct 10:
The SSCA steering committee merges with the National Leather
Association, SSCA members are added to the NLA board of
directors and the NLA accepts the statement of purpose
adopted at the Dallas Conference. Work begins on bylaws.
1989
Books Published:
-
"Gentle Warriors"
by Geoff Mains.
-
"Macho Sluts"
by Pat Califia.
-
"The Language of Sadomasochism,
A Glossary and Linguistic Analysis"
by Thomas E Murray and Thomas R. Murrell.
-
1989:
Formation of Affirmation Leathermen; Boston Unified Leather Legion
(BULL); Brotherhood of Pain, Houston; Knights on Iron MC, San Diego;
Leather United, Chicago; Menamore LLC, Wilmington NC; Mike's Men,
Boston; Omaha Players Club; Oregon Activists of SM (ORGASM); Rangers,
Inc., Cleveland; Sacramento Leather Association; Seattle Men in
Leather; Silver Dolphins LLC, Corpus Christi; Trash, Vancouver
BC; and Trusted Servants, SF.
-
1989:
California Motor Club of San Francisco disbands
after 26 years. [LJ 93]
-
1989:
The German SM-group "freieSMuenchen" is formed in
Munich. By 1995 it will have 50 members about 30% of them
women. [wd]
-
1989:
Stormy Leather opens at 1158 Howard in San Francisco. This
is probably the first leather shop owned by, and operated
primarily for, women.
-
1989:
Fantasy '98, organized by Dustin Logan, brings a great many
title holders to Omaha Nebraska for a weekend of interaction
that inspires the term Asash bash" and raises over $9,000
for local charities.
-
1989, Feb:
The Leather Journal names Alan Selby man of the year and names
Shan Carr and Judy Tallwing McCarthy jointly Women of the year.
-
1989, March:
Trash, a woman to woman SM organization is founded in
Vancouver BC. Disbands in 1990.
-
1989, March 9:
Robert Mapplethorpe dies of AIDS in New York City.
-
1989, March:
Susie Shepherd of Portland, OR, is named the third International
Ms Leather at the contest in San Francisco.
-
1989, May 8:
Fred Halsted, erotic film actor, director, producer, as well
as leather writer and magazine publisher, commits suicide in
Los Angeles.
-
1989, May:
NLA: Seattle holds May Day Conference, Guy Baldwin and Jan
Lyon are selected Mr. and Ms NLA.
-
1989, May 28:
Tony DeBlase presents his design for a leather pride flag
to the audience at International Mr. Leather, the first
time the flag is presented to the public.
-
1989, May 28:
Guy Baldwin of Los Angeles becomes the 11th International
Mr. Leather at the contest at the Vic theatre in Chicago.
-
1989, June:
The Leather Pride flag is carried by the leather contingent
in the Portland OR pride parade, it's first appearance at
such an event. (A week preceding pride parades in San Francisco
and New York City, where it is also flown).
-
1989, June:
The Corcoran Gallery in Washington DC, cancels a scheduled
Robert Mapplethorpe exhibit because of pressure by anti-gay
Senator Jesse Helms (R-NC) and others.
-
1989, June:
20th Anniversary of the Stonewall Riots, GMSMA organizes
a massive leather contingent for the New York City parade.
-
1989, June 20:
Death of bar owner, and guidebook publisher, Bob Dameron.
Among the Los Angeles and San Francisco bars he owned are
the Hideaway, Febe's and the SF Eagle. But he was also the
originator of the bar guide that helped us all find what
we were looking for wherever we were.
-
1989, June 30:
Laser artist Rockne Krebs projects the photographs of Robert
Mapplethorpe on the exterior walls of the Corcoran Gallery in
Washington DC. The exhibit of Mapplethorpe's work, scheduled
to open on this day, had been canceled due to political pressure
from Jesse Helms and other conservative members of Congress. [TOL]
-
1989, July 26:
US Senate passes the NEA funding bill with the "Helms
Ammendment." This is probably the first time SM is
mentioned in a US law.
-
1989, Sept:
Brian Dawson of Los Angeles becomes the tenth Mr. Drummer
and Dieter Edwards is named the first Drummerboy of the year
at the contest in San Francisco.
-
1989, Sept:
Chicago Hellfire Club holds Inferno 19 in Douglas MI.
Fred "Ollie" Stewart receives the Caligula Award.
Jim Ward is named the first recipient of the J Paul Eaton award.
-
1989, Oct:
Cynthia Ann Slater, founder of the Society of Janus, dies of
AIDS in San Francisco. [wd]
-
1989, Oct 1:
Axel and Eigil Axgil, a male couple, become the first to marry
under Denmark's Same Sex Marriage registry. [TOL]
-
1989, Oct 7-9:
NLA's Living in Leather IV conference is held in Portland,
OR. Geoff Mains and Cynthia Slater receive the NLA Lifetime
Achievement Awards. Dr. Nan Borrows gives the keynote address.
-
1989, Oct 17:
The Loma Parieta earthquake shakes the San Francisco Bay area
virtually destroying the buildings containing the Drummer
offices, the Lone Star Saloon and many other leather oriented
businesses, as well as the homes of many leather people.
-
1989, Nov 4:
NLA: Los Angeles sponsors Bondage as Art show at Leonardo DaVinci
Art Gallery. Bondage themed paintings, drawings, collage,
photography, and inanimate sculpture are augmented by living
bondage sculptures created by numerous artists from around
the country. Huge crowds attend, including LAPD and Fire
Departments who close down the show due to overcrowding
of the facility.
-
1989: Deaths:
Bob Damron, bar owner and creator of the gay bar guide;
Fred Halsted, porn star, film producer, writer, and magazine
publisher; Sashie Hyatt, spouse of Judy Tallwing McCarthy
and leatherdyke from Hell! organizer of many lesbian SM
organizations, and driving force behind many leather dyke
titleholders; Geoff Mains, author of Urban Aboriginals and
Gentile Warriors. [LJ 93]
1990
Books Published:
-
Bad Boys & Tough Tattoos
by Sam Steward.
-
Some Dance to Remember
by Jack Fritscher, a novel set in San Francisco's
gay leather scene.
-
Lights out in the Reptile House
a novel by Jim Shepard, a novel with strong SM overtones.
-
The Quest
a short story collection by Ben George.
-
Doc and Fluff
a lesbian SM novel by Pat Califia.
-
Mineshaft Nights
by Leo Cardini, an accurate picture of this famous
place by one of its former employees.
-
From Female to Male
The Life of Jack Bee Garland by Louis Sullivan
-
Encyclopedia of Homosexuality
a two volume set edited by Wayne R. Dynes
-
Coming Out Under Fire
The History of Gay Men and Women in World War Two
by Allan Berube
-
1990:
Formation of Bay Area Levi/Leather Society (BALLS), Corpus
Christi; Bluegrass Colts, Lexington; Northwest Bears, Seattle;
Omikron, Indianapolis; Tarheel Leather Club, Greensboro NC;
Tri-State Gay Rodeo Association; and United Leatherfolk of
Connecticut. Barbary Coasters MC, SF; Trash, BC; and Zodiacs,
BC disband.
-
1990:
Formation of the Betty Page Social Club, sponsor
of Toronto's Fetish nights.
-
1990:
The Finnish Government awards a $50,000 grant towards the
making of a documentary on the life and work of Tom of Finland,
to be titled Daddy and the Muscle Academy. [LJ 93]
-
1990:
QSM (Quality SM) founded by Karen Mendelsohn starts a series
of SM/fetish educational classes in San Francisco, that is
still going strong as this is published. [LJ 93]
-
1990:
The newly formed Tarheel Leather Club of Greensboro North
Carolina, takes on the formidable task of trying to unseat
US Senator Jesse Helms R-NC. Their "Beat Jesse"
campaign gains nationwide support, including that of IMsL
Susie Shepherd with her t-shirt campaign. [LJ 93]
-
1990:
The US Census Bureau for the fist time includes a question
on the census form that can help identify same sex couples.
69,200 female couples and 88,200 male couples self-identify. [TOL]
-
1990:
Release of USSM 1, the first of a series of four videos
co-produced by Zeus and Drummer that depict real SM scenes
with real SM players. There will eventually be four titles
in this series. By 1995 they will be withdrawn from the US
market due to persecution of the Los Angeles police.
-
1990:
The 16 defendants in England's Operation Spanner case are
brought to trial and convicted of assault and battery, because
the judge rules that consent is not recognized, and even the
bottoms who were consensually "assaulted" are
deemed guilty!
-
1990, Jan:
The German SM-group "gibS/Mir" is formed in Kiel.
By 1995 it will have about 20 members. [wd]
-
1990, Feb:
The Leather Journal names Dustin Logan, of Omaha Nebraska,
and Jan Lyon of Seattle, man and woman of the year. Tony
DeBlase is named business person of the year and GMSMA is
named club of the year.
-
1990, Feb 24:
Death of Malcolm Forbes, American millionaire and publisher
of Forbes magazine. After his death it was revealed that Forbes,
who had been divorced in 1985, spent an increasing amount of
time in his later years in leather, riding his motorcycle
and visiting New York City's leather/SM bars and backrooms
(born: Aug 18, 1919)
-
1990, Mar 3:
A fire destroys Touche, a prominent Chicago Leather Bar.
-
1990, Mar:
New York City officials close safe-sex clubs in the wake of a club fire.
-
1990, Mar:
Gabriel Antolovich of San Diego becomes the fourth
International Ms Leather at the contest in San Francisco.
-
1990, May 10:
Chuck Renslow awarded charter membership in the City of
Chicago Gay & Lesbian Hall of Fame.
-
1990, May:
Mark Ryan of Boston is named the 12th International Mr.
Leather at the contest at the Vic Theatre in Chicago.
-
1990, May:
Susie Shepherd, International Ms Leather 1989, is the first
woman to appear on the cover of The Leather Journal #15. The
decision is not popular with magazine readers. [LJ 93]
-
1990, June:
In New York City GMSMA is invited to send a representative
to a community meeting to be held at the residence of the Mayor.
-
1990, Summer:
Luke Owens' Master & Slave contest is held in Los Angeles
and won by Mark Bowers and Bob Farrell.
-
1990, July 24:
Congressman Bob Dornan reads his "psychopath" speech
into the US Congressional Record, saying, "There are no
psychopathic dark recesses of my mind that know how to handle
sadism, masochism, bondage, discipline, or torture disguised
as some sort of sexual thrill..." [JWB]
-
1990, Autumn:
The German SM-group SMbH is formed in Hanover. [wd]
-
1990, Sept:
Chicago Hellfire Club holds Inferno 19 in Douglas MI. William
Robert Birtles receives the Caligula Award and Brian Drake
the J. Paul Eaton award.
-
1990, Sept 18:
Clive Platman, Mr. Australia Drummer, presents Leather Pride
Flag designer Tony DeBlase with an Australian version of the
flag, incorporating the southern cross, from the Australian
national flag, onto the original LPF design.
-
1990, Sept 22:
Clive Platman of Melborne, Australia is named the 11th Mr.
Drummer in the first truly International Mr. Drummer contest
in San Francisco. John Siracusa is named Drummerboy of the year.
-
1990, Oct 26-29:
NLA's Living In Leather V conference is held in Portland, OR.
Jim Richards is reelected Male co-chair and Shannon Kennedy
is elected Female co-chair. The Rev. Troy Perry is keynote
speaker and Chuck Renslow and Pat Califia are presented with
lifetime achievement awards. The contest is switched to LIL
from May Day and Howard Martin of Seattle and Ruth Marks
of San Francisco win the Mr. and Ms NLA titles. Jan Lyon
presents the organization with a huge, spectacular, studded
leather banner created by Lee Willis of the Studworks.
-
1990, Nov 6:
Deborah Glick becomes the first out gay or lesbian elected to
the New York State Assembly. [TOL]
-
1990, Dec 5:
Death of Robert Chesley, Author of the play Jerker, and many other works.
1991
Books Published:
-
Frisk
by Dennis Cooper a highly controversial novel full of violence
and terminal scenes.
-
Leather Rouges and Rouges to Remember
by Bill Lee (R. L. Warner).
-
Understanding the Male Hustler
by Sam Steward.
-
A Breviary of Torment
poems by Thomas Cashet.
-
Master's Counterpoints
by Larry Townsend, the first in a series of gay mystery
novels with a leather theme.
-
The Joy of Sexual Fantasy
by Dr. Andrew Stanway.
-
Leathermen Speak Out, An Anthology on Leathersex
Edited by Jack Ricardo.
-
1991:
Formation of Baltimore Leather Association of the Deaf
(BLADeaf); Chain of Command, San Antonio; DAMES, Milwaukee;
Key West Wreckers LLC; Melbourne Leather Men; NLA:Houston;
Ozbears Australia, Sydney; Patrol Uniform Club, San Antonio;
Stars MC, Albany NY; Tri-State Wolfpack, Cincinnati; Three
Rivers LC, Pittsburgh; and Unicorns of Madison, WI.
-
1991:
Melbourne Leather Men become the first club to incorporated
the Leather Pride Flag design elements into their club colors.
-
1991:
C-Space, a leather/SM/fetish educational service, which
conducts lectures, demonstrations, etc. on various subjects,
is organized in Seattle.
-
1991:
The German lawyer Valentin Sitzmann publishes Zur Strafbarkeit
sado-masochistischer Koerperverletzung. His analysis of German
federal law comes to the conclusion that consensual sadomasochism
is legal in Germany as long as any injury is not excessive. In
his opinion, Masochists cannot be sued at all. [wd]
-
1991:
Actor Paul Reubens, better know as his character Pee Wee
Herman, is arrested for exposing himself and masturbating
in a Florida porn cinema. He lost his job as host of a
popular children's TV show.
-
1991:
The first American Leatherman contest names Jose Alberto
Ucles as the titleholder.
-
1991, Feb:
The Leather Journal holds its first Pantheon of Leather
awards ceremony in Los Angeles. Bill Costomiris and Susie
Shepherd are named Man and Woman of the Year. Lee Willis
of the Studworks is named Business Person of the year and
Tarheel Leather Club is Club of the Year. New awards this
year include: Forbearer - Tom of Finland; Not for profit
Organization - The Robert Maplethorpe Foundation; Reader's
Choice - Susie Shepherd; Publisher's Award - Bob Craig.
Regional: Race Bannon, Bill Costomiris, Jaye Evans,
& George Nelson.
-
1991, March:
Kay Hallanger of Bloomington, IN, is named the 5th International
Ms Leather at the contest in San Francisco.
-
1991, Mar. 8:
GMSMA celebrates its 10th Anniversary with a reception,
conference, banquet, and show. The printed program is rich
in historical information including a prototype of this
timeline compiled by Gil Kessler and Thor Stockman.
-
1991, May:
D. Cannon of Palm Springs CA is named the 13th International
Mr. Leather at the Vic Theatre in Chicago.
-
1991, Summer:
Luke Owen's Master & Slave contest in Los Angeles is won
by Race Bannon & Mike Pierce.
-
1991, Summer:
The German SM-activist group AAG SM & Oeffentlichkeit"
is formed as part of the Suendikat Hamburg. Its aim is to improve
the contact of sadomasochists with the general public and spread
information among the German SM-subculture. [wd]
-
1991, July 7:
Philip Rubin is named the first International Mr. Deaf Leather
at the contest in Dallas.
-
1991, Sept 6-12:
Chicago Hellfire Club holds Inferno 20 in Douglas MI. Tony
DeBlase receives the Caligula Award and John Robbins the J
Paul Eaton award. This year Inferno is expanded to six days,
divided into A and B sessions.
-
1991, Sept 20 - 21:
Woody Bebout of St. Louis is named the 12th Mr. Drummer at the
contest in San Francisco. Kevin Stedman of Orlando FL becomes
the third Drummerboy of the year.
-
1991, Sept 24:
Dom "Etienne" Orejudos dies of AIDS related causes in
Boulder, Colorado.
-
1991, Oct:
Leatherfolk, a collection of essays on gay and lesbian SM,
edited by Mark Thompson is published.
-
1991, Oct 11:
At the opening ceremonies of Living in Leather a Canadian
version of the Leather Pride Flag is presented. It ads to
the basic design of the flag a row of red maple leaves
running horizontally through the white stripe. To the
best of my knowledge the design has never been used
again. [AFD]
-
1991, Oct 11-13:
NLA's Living in Leather VI conference is held in Chicago.
Perry Watkins delivers the keynote address and Steve Maidhof
and Jan Lyon are presented with Lifetime Achievement Awards.
Bill Miranda Saltzman and Laura Goodwin are named Mr. and Ms
NLA at the contest.
-
1991, Nov 7:
Tom of Finland dies of emphysema in Helsinki at the age of 71.
-
1991, Nov 11:
Steve Maidhof, founding daddy of the National Leather Association
and creator of the Living in Leather conferences, dies in San Francisco.
1992
Books Published:
-
The Catalyst
- a collection of short stories about sadomasochism
published by Masquerade Books, which brought back the
era of the "pulp fiction" adult novel with
scores of inexpensive, widely released paperbacks which
found their way to mainstream bookstores all over the
world. This particular book was written by fledgling
writer Laura Antoniou, under her pseudonym Sara Adamson.
Tales of the Dark Lord by John Preston.
-
Dream Master and other SM Stories
by Larry Townsend.
-
One for the Master, Two for the Fool
by Larry Townsend.
-
The Switch and other Stories
by Torsten Barring.
-
The Encyclopedia of Unusual Sex Practices
by Brenda Love.
-
Learning the Ropes, A Basic Guide to Safe
and Fun S/M Lovemaking
by Race Bannon.
-
Sir! More Sir!, The Joy of S&M
by Master Jackson.
-
SM 101, A Realistic Introduction
by Jay Wiseman.
-
Making History, The Struggle for Gay and
Lesbian Equal Rights 1945 - 1990
by Eric Marcus
-
The Homoerotic Photograph, Male Images from
Durieu/Delacroix to Mapplethorpe
by Allen Ellenzweig.
-
Publication of the first issue of
Body Play Magazine,
edited and published by Fakir Musifar.
-
1992:
Formation of Cable Car Chapter of Knights of Malta, SF;
Defenders LLC/Washington; Long Island Ravens MC; and URSAMEN
New Preston, CT.
-
1992:
The German SM-group Sadomasochistische Interessengemeinschaft
e.V. is formed in Berlin. [wd]
-
1992:
The AG SM & Oeffentlichkeit becomes an independent group [wd]
-
1992:
The German Peter Bahnen publishes Zur Sozialgeschichte des
Sadomasochismus in which he explains his theory on the
processes that enabled the formation of sadomasochistic
subcultures at this time in history. [wd]
-
1992:
Canada lifts its ban on allowing lesbians and gays to serve
in the military. [TOL]
-
1992:
Jose Alberto Ucles is named to continue for another year
as American Leatherman.
-
1992:
Bob Donaldson is named the second International Mr. Deaf
Leather at the contest in Baltimore, MD.
-
1992, Jan:
The German SM-group Main Pain is formed in Frankfurt am Main. [wd]
-
1992, Feb:
At The Leather Journal's Pantheon of Leather awards ceremony
in Los Angeles Jim Richards and Pat Califia are named man and
woman of the year. Other recipients are: Business Person -
R.J. Chaffin; Business - Mr. S Leather; Club - Chicago
Hellfire Club; Not for profit Organization - National
Leather Association; Reader's Choice - Clive Platman
& Ruth Marks; Forbearer - Gayle Rubin; Lifetime
Achievement - Tom of Finland; Publishers - Chuck Renslow;
International - George Whiting; Regionals: Southeast - M.
P. Breslin; South Central - Philip Rubin; Rocky Mountain -
Dino Rosie; West Coast - John Siracusa; Midwestern - Thom
Dombowski; Eastern - Peri Jude Radecic.
-
1992, Feb:
Luke Owens coupled his contest to the Pantheon of Leather
weekend and renamed it the International Master & Slave
Contest. Winners this year were K.T. Chase and Susie Shepherd.
-
1992, Mar:
Blair of San Francisco is named the 6th International Ms
Leather at the contest in San Francisco.
-
1992, Mar:
The German heterosexual SM-group SMart Rhein-Ruhr is
founded in Essen. By 1997, it will have 100 members
and regional groups in seven cities. [wd]
-
1992, March 30:
Debra Chasnoff wins an Academy Award for the documentary
film Deadly Deception. [TOL]
-
1992, Spring:
The German SM-group Lustvolles Leiden is formed in Muenster. [wd]
-
1992, April:
The first regular Munch takes place at "Kirk's" in
Palo Alto CA after STella posts the date on the internet
newsgroup alt.sex.bondage. Sporadic Munches had taken place
before then. [wd]
-
1992, May:
The German heterosexual SM-group SMart Bremen-Oldenburg is
founded in Bremen and Oldenburg. [wd]
-
1992, May 12:
Death of Bob Mizer, age 70, who from 1945 to 1990 was The
Athletic Model Guild and from 1951 to 1990, held total
control over it's publication Physique Pictorial. He
created a 45 year celebration of the male body beautiful,
and along the way invented gay wrestling, and discovered
many prominent artists, including Tom of Finland. [WES]
-
1992, May 19:
Desmodus Inc., including Drummer, Mach, Tough Customers,
DungeonMaster, The Sandmutopia Guardian, and The Sandmutopia
Supply Company, is sold to a Dutch corporation headed by
Martjin Bakker, who is also the owner of RoB Amsterdam
stores and galleries. Tony DeBlase becomes Editor Emeritis.
-
1992, May 23:
The first meeting of the Board of Directors of the Leather
Archives and Museum is held during the IML weekend in Chicago.
LA&M is officially founded.
-
1992, May 24:
Lenny Broberg of San Francisco becomes the 14th International Mr.
Leather at the contest at the Aragon Ballroom in Chicago.
-
1992, May 17:
Clubs across the continent host screening parties for the
comedy video Out For Laughs a collaboration of many gay and
lesbian talents spearheaded by stand up comic, and International
Ms Leather 1988, Shan Carr.
-
1992, Sept 6:
Death, in San Francisco, of International Mr. Leather 1983,
Colt Thomas. (born: May 22, 1959)
-
1992, Sept 9 - 13:
Chicago Hellfire Club holds Inferno 21 in Douglas MI. Robert
Guenther receives the Caligula Award and Ty Clements the J.
Paul Eaton award.
-
1992, Sept 19:
Emerson Briney of Omaha, is named the 13th Mr. Drummer. John
Hare of Los Angeles is named Drummerboy of the year at the
contest in San Francisco.
-
1992, Oct 9:
NLA organizes demonstrations at the British Consulate in
Chicago protesting treatment of the Operation Spanner
defendants.
-
1992, Oct 9-11:
NLA's Living in Leather VII conference is held in Chicago. Pat
Bond, a founder of Eulenspiegel in New York City, gives the
keynote address and also receives the Lifetime Achievement
award. Andy Anderson and K. T. Chase are selected as Mr.
and Ms NLA.
-
1992, Nov:
Australia ends its ban on gays and lesbians serving in
the military. [TOL]
-
1992, Nov:
Publication of the first issue of Checkmate, by T. A. Feldwebel,
former editor of DungeonMaster, as an alternative to that title.
-
1992, Nov 8:
Representatives from the leather/SM communities meet with
representatives of the National Endowment of the Arts to
discuss attacks on freedom of expression. The meetings
are organized by Peri Jude Radecic of NGLTF.
-
1992, Nov 9:
The German Sadomasochist Wolfgang Boghardt holds public
information courses on SM at Volkschochschulen (adult
education centers) in Duisburg and Muelheim an der Ruhr.
Media attention will force him to stop the popular
courses. [wd]
1993
Books Published:
-
On the Safe Edge, A Manual for SM Play
by Trevor Jacques with Dr. Dale, Michael Hamilton, & Sniffer
-
Different Loving - The World of Sexual Dominance and Submission
by Gloria Brame et al.
-
SM: Sensuous Magic, A Guide for
Adventurous Couples
by Pat Califia.
-
The Arena
by John Preston.
-
My Life as a Pornographer, &
Other Indecent Acts
by John Preston
-
Exposed, Big Shots, and Beast of Burden,
three collections of short stories by Aaron Travis
-
Leatherwomen,
edited by Laura Antoniou - the first collection of
women's sadomasochistic fiction since
-
Coming to Power,
The Marketplace, a modern SM/erotic novel, by Laura
Antoniou (Masquerade edition)
-
The Magazine of a Sadomasochistic Club:
The Tie that Binds
by Rick Houlberg is published in the
Journal of Homosexuality,
Vol. 21 (1/2). This is the first know content analysis
of such a publication. [wd]
-
Lewd Conduct
a collection of short stories by John W. Rowberry.
-
Peter Thornwell
by Torsten Barring.
-
Ties That Bind
by Guy Baldwin, a compilation of his columns from Drummer
and other publications.
-
The Leather Contest Guide
by Guy Baldwin.
-
Bob Flanagan: Supermasochist
published by REsearch as Vol. 1 in the People Series.
-
Ain't Nobody's Business If You Do,
The Absurdity of Consensual Crimes in
a Free Society
by Peter McWilliams.
-
Le Phallus, Sacred Symbol of Male Creative Power
by Alain Danilou in French. English edition 1995.
-
Mark Thompson's Leatherfolk
is published in German as Lederlust --
Der SM-Kult. [wd]
-
1993:
Formation of Icon Detroit; Long Island Ravens; Journeyman
of Syracuse; South Texas Leather Men, Corpus Christi; Suncoast
LLC, St. Petersburg FL; Tartarus, St. Louis; and Trident
International Windy City, Chicago. Cycle MC and Wheels MC
merge in NYC.
-
1993:
Los Angeles Police raid the San Diego home of Lee Baldwin,
who produced, directed, and starred in his own line of gay
SM videos. Police confiscate Ass Play, a video that includes
several fisting scene, and several others. Baldwin is convicted
and sentenced to 547 hours of community service and fined $3000.
-
1993:
Sports Illustrated rejects an Adidas advertisement because
it featured a Canadian soccer team wearing nothing but their
athletic shoes, despite the fact that thanks to artfully
arranged hands, heads and soccer balls, not one team
member showed more flesh than the average female model
does in SI's notorious annual swimsuit issue. [Hooven 95]
-
1993:
Jeff Chiofolo is named American Leatherman.
-
1993:
Chris Muller is named International Mr. Deaf leather.
-
1993:
John Ferrari is named Mr. Vulcan Rubber.
-
1993, Feb 14:
The Lesbian Avengers erect a papier-mâché sculpture of
Alice B. Toklas beside the statue of Gertrude Stein in Bryant
Park in New York City. [TOL]
-
1993, Mar. 5:
Tam von Hohenzohllern & Kit Terkel are selected as second
International Master & Slave at contest in Orlando.
-
1993, Mar. 6:
The Leather Journal's Pantheon of Leather awards ceremony
is held in Orlando. Woody Bebout and Kay Hallanger were
named Man and Woman of the Year. Other awards are: Business
person - Kevin Drewery; Business - The Hun/Bill Schmeling;
Club - Outer Limits; Not for Profit Organization - AIDS
Emergency Fund of San Francisco; Forbearer - Dom Orejudos;
Lifetime Achievement - Chuck Renslow; Publisher's - Wane
Griffith; Reader's Choice - Joseph Bean & Woody
Bebout (tie) & Kay Hallanger; International -
Andy Anderson; Regionals: Southeast - Janet
Blevens; South Central - Chuck Higgins; Rocky
Mountain - Pat Sanchez; West Coast - Race Bannon;
Midwestern - Bryan Smith; Eastern - Barry Douglas;
Canadian - Bill Houghton.
-
1993, Mar:
Amy Marie Meek of Omaha becomes the 7th International Ms
Leather at the contest in San Francisco.
-
1993, Apr 24:
The second "SM Leather Conference" is held in
Washington DC during the March on Washington for Lesbian,
Gay and Bisexual Rights."
-
1993, Apr 24:
Jad Keres and other members of the American legion SM-group
Female Trouble Philadelphia launch a study on violence against
lesbian sadomasochists at the "SM Leather Conference"
during the "March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay and
Bisexual Rights." [wd]
-
1993, May:
The German SM-group SMAGK is formed in Karslruhe. By 1995
it will have about 15 members. [wd]
-
1993, May:
National Leather Association opens international office in
San Francisco and hires first paid staff member.
-
1993, May 28:
Leather Archives and Museum opens its first display of
collected materials during the International Mr. Leather
weekend in Chicago.
-
1993, May 28:
Publication of the first edition of this Leather History
TimeLine edited by Anthony F. DeBlase.
-
1993, May 29:
Leather Archives and Museum holds it's first membership meeting
in Chicago during IML.
-
1993, May 30:
Henri Ten Have from the Netherlands is selected as the
15th International Mr. Leather at the Aragon Ballroom
in Chicago.
-
1993, May 30:
David Morgan is selected as the first International Boot
Black during the IML contest in Chicago.
-
1993, June 23:
Lorena Bobbitt, for whatever reason, used a kitchen knife to
slice off her sleeping husband's penis, which she tossed into
a grassy field. It was recovered and, through the miracles of
modern surgery, reattached. In their separate trials both
John and Lorena Bobbitt were acquitted.
-
1993, Aug:
The German AG SM & Oeffentlichkeit publishes the first
edition of the SM Adressbuch, a yearly collection of mostly
heterosexual SM-resources and addresses. More than 3,500
copies will have been sold by August 1995. [wd]
-
1993, Aug 12:
Trident International Windy City founded by John
Schultz, Rob Ridinger and Ed Luisi. (RR)
-
1993, Sept 8-13:
Chicago Hellfire Club hosts Inferno 22 in Douglas MI.
David Clare and Stephen Shorle jointly receive the
Caligula award and Anthony Kohut the J. Paul Eaton
award.
-
1993, Sept 9:
the first Leather/SM/Fetish munch in Oregon is held at the
Cornelius Pass Roadhouse in Hillsboro. 19 people attend
including Patti Beadles who, as Kris Asber, had posted
the invitation for the munch to alt.sex.bondage. Within
the next two days she had founded the pdx.abs mailing list
and shortly thereafter the group started having munches on
a weekly basis at the Blue Moon saloon in Portland. As of
this printing they still do.
-
1993, Sept 25:
Graylin Thornton of Sacramento is selected as the 14th Mr.
Drummer, during the Leather Pride Week contest in San Francisco.
Spot Gilea, also from Northern California, was named Drummerboy
of the Year.
-
1993, Oct 8-10:
NLA's Living In Leather VIII conference was held in
Houston. Peri Jude Radecic keynote speaker. Lifetime
Achievement Awards to Fakir Musafar and Dorothy Hajdys.
Mark Frasier & Artemis Silver Owl both from Dallas,
are named Mr. & Ms NLA.
-
1993, Nov:
The German sociologist Thomas A. Wetzstein publishes the
results of a study on the German SM-subculture in
"Ssadomasochismus - Szenen und Rituale". The
findings support the concepts of Spengler and Weinbert.
About 38% of the respondents are women. The results are
not published in English and receive no notice outside of
Germany. [wd]
-
1993, Dec 31:
Death of Samuel Moris Steward, 82. Instructor in SM
to Chuck Renslow, Alfred Kinsey, and many more;
recognized writer under his own name, and as Phil
Andros. recognized artist under his own name, and
as Phil Sparrow, tattoo artist.
1994
Books Published:
-
Publication of the first issue of Body Play magazine,
edited and published by Fakir Musifar.
-
Mapplethorpe, Assault ith a Deadly Camera, A
Pop Culture Memoir
by Jack Fritscher.
-
Shaddowman
by Torsten Barring.
-
The Flesh Fables,
a collection of short stories by Aaron Travis.
-
The Slave Prince
by Vince Gilman
-
A Caning For Sinngapore,
by RT/Texas
-
Leathersex: A Guide for the Curious Outsider and
the Serious Player
by Joseph Bean,
-
Doing it for Daddy
by Pat Califia.
-
Public Sex
by Pat Califia.
-
Beneath the Skins,
by Ivo Domingues Jr.
-
Elements of Arousal
by Lars Eighner.
-
Leathersex
by Max Exander (Paul Reed).
-
Leatherwomen II,
edited by Laura Antoniou The Slave, Book 2 in the
Marketplace series, by Laura Antoniou (Masquerade
edition).
-
Sadomasochism
by William Thompson.
-
Submission Holds
by Key Lincoln
-
Hustling: A Gentleman's Guide to the Fine Art
of Homosexual Prostitution
by John Preston.
-
Tales from the Dark Lord II
by John Preston.
-
The Kiss of the Whip: Explorations in SM
by Jim Prezwalski.
-
The Master's Manual: A Handbook
of Erotic Dominance
by Jack Rinella.
-
Tom of Finland, His Life and Times
by Valentine F. Hooven III.
-
Animal Handlers
by Jay Shaffer.
-
That Day at the Quarry
by Tom Shaw.
-
Resource Book Three
by SM Gays of London.
-
Erotica Universalis
by Giles Neret
-
Rituals
by Kyle Stone
-
The Case of the Severed Head
by Larry Townsend
-
Hazing: An Anthology of Hazing Tales
by Bob Wingate. [G 96]
-
1994:
Clubs formed: Bears LA (Los Angeles), Bears of San
Francisco, Bears SD (San Diego), Vancouver [BC] branch
of Betty Page Social Club, Black Eagle Leather Klub
(Los Angeles), Black Jack Bears (Las Vegas), Boston
Rubber Club, Brothers in Leather, Chemnitzer Eagle
(Germany), Club Les Cuirasses de Quebec (Quebec
City), Defenders LLC/San Francisco, Delta International,
Enforcers RI (Providence), Empowerment through Sensual
Conduct and Attitudes Power Exchange (Escape, Las Vegas),
FIST (Houston), Females Investigating Sexual Terrain
(FIST, Baltimore) 4-L Club (SF), Houston Area Bears,
Inter-Bike (Copenhagen), Leather Club Thuringen
(Germany), Leather Scribes, Mates Provincetown,
Mecs en Caoutchiuc (Dammarie Les Lys, FR), Rogues
MC (Roanoke, VA), SandMen (San Diego), Silver
State Leather Association (Reno), Steel City
Centurions (Birmingham AL), Tennessee Leather
Tribe, Memphis: Toronto Deaf Leather Association,
and Trident Knights (Charleston SC). [G 96]
-
1994:
Mudmen (Houston) changes name to SludgeMaster. [G 96]
-
1994:
The pansexual German SM-group Offener Gespraechskreis SM
is formed in Berlin. [wd]
-
1994:
The German SM-group SMile Freiburg is formed in Friburg. [wd]
-
1994:
Satyrs MC, the oldest leather/motorcycle club in the USA
(and the world) holds the 33rd and LAST Badger Flats Run.
[G 96] That is what they said then, in 1998 the Satyrs resume
the Badger Flats Run!
-
1994:
First Mr. Bear Ohio, Ms East Coast Leather, Idaho Leather
Pride, Mr. New Mexico Leather, Mr. New Mexico Leather Pride,
Mr. Oklahoma Drummer, Mr. Philadelphia Deaf Leather, Rocky
Mountain Ms Leather, Ms San Diego Leather Woman, and Western
Canada Drummer contests. [G 96]
-
1994:
Brent Lacey (IML 1993 fist runner-up) receives Order of
Australia from Queen Elizabeth II for success of the Red
Ribbon Project. [G 96]
-
1994:
Chicks in White Satin, a documentary film by Elaine Holliman
about a lesbian wedding ceremony is nominated for an Academy
Award.
-
1994:
First issues of serials: Black Leather... In Color, Fetish,
In Uniform, Masta Entertainment Complete Video Catalog, and
Project X. [G 96]
-
1994:
Gayle Rubin completes her PhD in Anthropology at the University
of Michigan. Her dissertation is The Valley of the Kings:
Leathermen in San Francisco, 1960 - 1990.
-
1994:
Business openings include: Clone Zone store on Earls Court,
across from the Coleherne, London's oldest leather bar; Gays
and Lesbians of Brooklyn and Everywhere community center; Mon
Cheri's The Chamber, Atlanta, GA; Our House Gallery, Amsterdam;
and 7702 SM Club, West Hollywood. [G 96]
-
1994:
Faultline, formerly Griff's Los Angeles, reopens. [G 96]
-
1994:
James McGlade buys The Leather Rack (DC) from Richard Cogan. [G 96]
-
1994:
In an interview published in "The New Yorker",
Dominique Aury admits that she is Pauline Reage, author of
The Story of O. She said she wrote the book as a love
letter to the man she adored, Jean Paulhan, a prominent
French critic, after he said she couldn't write an erotic
book.
-
1994, Early:
The mailbox Slaves and Masters BBS is founded in
Hamburg, Germany. [wd]
-
1994:
The new Republic of South Africa constitution prohibits
discrimination based on sexual orientation. [G 96]
-
1994:
The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders,
4th Edition is issued with considerably revised definitions
of Masochism and Sadism, which in essence say that it they are
not illnesses unless you are bothered by your interest in
them and they interfere with your normal functioning in
other aspects of your life.
-
1994:
Thomas S. Weinberg publishes a summary of two decades of
sociological research on sadomasochism, describing it as
"erotic, consensual, and recreational." [wd]
-
1994:
The American psychologist Eugene E. Levitt and colleagues
confirm Breslow's finding that non-prostitute female
sadomasochists exist. [wd]
-
1994:
The first Spanner/Mart fundraiser, organized by the 15
Association and others, is held in San Francisco to raise
money for the Operation Spanner defense fund. [G 96]
-
1994:
A film version of Ann Rice's novel Exit to Eden is released.
It is very SM positive, but critics pan it. It is pretty silly,
but so was the novel.
-
1994:
Victor Magide is named American Leatherman and Sarah Humble is
named American Leatherwoman.
-
1994:
Jose Granda is named International Mr. Deaf Leather.
-
1994:
Ryan Johnson is named Mr. Vulcan Rubber 1994.
-
1994:
Missouri high school teacher Rodney Wilson organizes teachers
and community leaders to educate the public about the history
of lesbian, gay and bisexual people. The National Gay and
Lesbian History Month each October grows out of this
movement. [TOL]
-
1994, Jan:
The Lure, a leather bar, opens in New York city just around the
corner from the former site of the Mineshaft. The consortium of
owners are all leathermen. It is instantly successful.
-
1994, Jan 19:
Tennessee Leather Tribe founded in Memphis. [RR]
-
1994, Feb 4:
Sheila Kuehl becomes the first out gay or lesbian elected
to the California Assembly. [TOL]
-
1994, Feb 26:
For the first time Gay and Lesbian Asian-Pacific
organizations are included in the San Francisco
Chinese New Year Parade. [TOL]
-
1994, March:
Publication of Doomed Rabbit, Recipes from the Kitchens of
Leather Folk and Friends compiled by Aubrey Hart Sparks, and
including recipes contributed by leather people from all over
North America, and from some non-leather people including
Hillary Clinton, is published as a fundraiser in the
"Hands off Washington" campaign.
-
1994, March:
The American lesbian SM-group Female Trouble in Philadelphia
publishes the study "Violence against SM Women within
the Lesbian Community" (The "Jad Keres Report").
Based on a 539 questionnaires completed by lesbian sadomasochists,
the study documents that 56% of them were subjected to some form
of violence from vanilla lesbians because of their SM
orientation. This is the only known study on violence
against sadomasochists, lesbians or otherwise. [wd]
-
1994, March 5:
John Birch and Beau Lee James of Oak Brook IL are
selected as the International Master and slave at
this year's contest in Houston.
-
1994, March 6:
The Leather Journal's Pantheon of Leather awards ceremony
is held in Houston. Joseph Bean and K.T. Chase are named
Man and Woman of the Year. Other awards are: Business
Person: Scott Rodriguez of the Cuff in Seattle WA; Business:
Mr. S Leathers, San Francisco; Club: Centaur MC, Washington
DC; Club sponsored event: Living in Leather VIII; Non-Profit
Organization: Brother Help Thyself, Washington DC; Forbearer:
Dom "Etienne" Orejudos; Lifetime Achievement: Tony
DeBlase; Readers Choice: Lenny Broberg and K. T. Chase;
Publisher's: Brian Dawson; International: Don Bastian,
Calgary; Regionals: West Coast - Guy Baldwin; Rocky
Mountain - Joe Potter; South Central - Boots Adams;
Midwest - Ed Tobin; Southeast - Jose Alberto Ucles;
Eastern - Alan Chiras; Canadian - Trevor Jacques.
-
1994, March 19:
Anne Bergstedt of Seattle WA, is selected as the 8th
International Ms Leather at the contest in San Francisco.
She later resigns and Cindy Bookout, the first runner
up, assumes the title.
-
1994, March 25-27:
Omikron of Indianapolis holds its first major run: Omikron
500 -- Lap 1. The Mr. Indiana Leather Contest was won by
Lance Bray of Fort Wane.
-
1994, March 31:
Tom of Finland exhibition opens at the Schwules Museum
in Berlin for a three month run. A Catalog of the exhibition
is published: Tom of Finland Exhibition 1994-95.
-
1994, May 27:
The second edition of this Leather History Timeline is published.
-
1994, May 27-30:
Leather Archives & Museum exhibits a portion of it's
collection in Chicago during International Mr. Leather 1994.
-
1994, May 29:
16th International Mr. Leather Contest. Jeff Tucker of San
Jose is selected at the contest at the Congress Theatre in Chicago.
-
1994, May 29:
International Boot Black 1994, William Steele is named
during the IML contest in Chicago.
-
1994: June:
Gay Games IV held in New York City
-
1994: June:
Celebration of the 25th Anniversary of the Stonewall Riots
held in New York City at the conclusion of Gay Games 1994.
Hundreds of thousands of gay men and women fill the city in
celebration.
-
1994, June:
A consortium of NYC area leather/SM clubs sponsors International
SM-Leather-Fetish Celebration. The largest conference of
SM/leather/fetish people yet!
-
1994, June:
Becoming Visible, an exhibit centering on the Stonewall riots,
but extending well into the pre-stonewall era of gay and lesbian
history in New York City is featured at the New York Public
Library. SUPERB!
-
1994, June:
Publication of Long Road to Freedom, The Advocate History of
the Gay and Lesbian Movement edited by Mark Thompson.
-
1994, June:
Joe Granda wins International Mr. Deaf Leather contest
in New York City.
-
1994, June 23:
The German government television station ARD shows a documentary
on the SM group Suendikat Hamburg. Though the end shows a female
sadomasochist who plans to get rid of her orientation, the tone
of this programs is mostly positive. [wd]
-
1994, July:
Michael M. Schein is convicted of obscenity for producing
and distributing gay male videos, including Give That Man
a Hand, depicting urination. He is sentenced to 18 months
federal detention.
-
1994, Sept:
Chicago Hellfire Club hosts Inferno 23 in Douglas Michigan.
Tony Philbin receives the Caligula award and Ralph Cheesborough
the J Paul Eaton award.
-
1994, Sept:
Leather Pride Week in San Francisco. Keith Hunt is named
International Mr. Drummer 1994/95,and Mark Colter is named
International drummerboy.
-
1994, Sept:
The first regular German radio program on sadomasochism by
sadomasochists, "Radio Schwazer Adler", is started
in Hamburg. It will broadcast over 30 programs by July
1997. [wd]
-
1994, Oct:
Living in Leather IX is held in Toronto ON. K. T. Chase
becomes new female Co-chair. Lifetime Achievement awards
are presented to John Preston and Nan Burrows. Titleholders
selected are Mr. NLA Don Bastian of Calgary and Ms NLA
Mary Dante of Toronto.
-
1994, Dec 10:
Bear Dog Hoffman takes over Richard Bulger's ailing Brush
Creek Media (Bear and Power Play magazines) and quickly
adds Terry LeGrande's Parkwood Publications (International
Leatherman, FQ, etc.) Brush Creek soon revives Bunkhouse
and Hombres Latinos magazines.
-
1994:
Deaths: historian John F Boswell; Mr. Drummer 1993,
Emerson Briney: Mr. Sacramento Leather 1991, Randy Gray;
Great Lakes Drummer Boy 1993, David Hawn; International
Mr. Leather 1987, Thomas Karasch; author John Preston;
The first Mr. Leather New York, Henry Romanowski; Leather
Journal columnist Paul "Papa Bear" Shem; San
Francisco Eagle manager, Terry Thompson; Mr. Indiana
Leather 1992, Ed Tobin; and David Weinbaum of GMSMA. [G 96]
1995
Books Published:
-
The Bottoming Book
by Dossie Easton and Catherine A. Lizst.
-
Screw the Roses, Send me the Thorns
by Philip Miller and Molly Devon.
-
Thy Rod and Staff
by Edward Anthony.
-
Writing Below the Belt, Conversations
with Erotic Authors
by Michael Rowe.
-
Looking for Mr. Preston,
edited by Laura Antoniou, a tribute anthology honoring the
memory of John Preston.
-
The Stonewall Experiment, A Gay Psychohistory
by Ian Young.
-
The Gay and Lesbian Literary Heritage, A
reader's companion to the writers and their
works, from antiquity to the present
Edited by Claude J. Summers.
-
Out of the Past, Gay and Lesbian History from 1869
to the Present
by Neil Miller.
-
Unspeakable, The Rise of the Gay and Lesbian
Press in America
by Rodger Streitmatter.
-
One-Handed Histories, The eroto-politics
of gay male video pornography
by John R. Burger.
-
The Hero, Manhood and Power
by John Lash.
-
Studies in Dominance and Submission
by Thomas A. Weinberg, A second, revised, edition. [wd].
-
By Her Subdued,
edited by Laura Antoniou.
-
No Other Tribute,
edited by Laura Antoniou.
-
Some Women,
edited by Laura Antoniou, with an introduction by Pat Califia.
-
The Trainer,
Book 3 in the Marketplace series, by Laura Antoniou
(Masquerade edition)
-
1995:
Clubs formed: Brew City Bears (Milwaukee), Coastal Empire
Sentinels (Savannah), The Dedicated and Safe Club (Chicago),
Dragon Leather Club (Columbus OH), Firebirds, Milwaukee; Harbor
City Bears (Sydney), International Dungeon and Playroom Association,
Knight Cruisers (Lexington) Leather Engineers of Omaha, ONYX/Chicago,
Pikes Peak Summit Masters (Colorado Springs), Red Earth Bears
(Oklahoma City), Seattle Kink Information Network (SKIN), South
Sound S&M Leatherfolk (Olympia WA), Sober, Safe, Sane and
Consensual Club of Chicago; The SOCIETY Connecticut chapter,
South Texas Lather Men (Corpus Christi), The Spanking Club
(Los Angeles), Texas Riders MC Corpus Christi Chapter, Trident
International Baltimore, Vulcan America Southern California
(Los Angeles) West Florida Growlers of Tampa, and Women's
Welcoming Committee (Seattle). [G 96]
-
1995, Early:
The German SM-group aktiveS/Muenchen is formed in Munich by
a splinter group of freiesMuenchen. [wd]
-
1995:
The Polish SM-Society is formed in Nowy Sacz, Poland. This
is the first known SM group in that country. [wd]
-
1995:
Clubs disbanded: Black Angels (Koln), Cascade Bears (Portland,
OR), Lost Angels (DC), Ozbears Australia, and Vanguards MC
(Philadelphia). [G 96]
-
1995:
C-Space, an SM instruction forum ceases operations in Seattle. [G 96]
-
1995:
The David Weinbaum Foundation is founded in New York City.
The purpose of the foundation it to make cash grants to
organizations to be used for specific projects benefiting
the Leather/SM/Fetish community.
-
1995:
The 15 Association creates a fund, named for deceased member
Alexis Sorel, in order to assist brothers in need. [G 96]
-
1995:
Northwest Bondage Club (Seattle) secures new meeting and play
space on Capitol Hill. [G 96]
-
1995:
First Ms Florida Leather, International Mr. Fantasy, Mr. Leather
Europe, and Ms New Mexico Leather contests.
-
1995:
Richard Kasak Books publishes a new edition of William Carney's
novel The Real Thing, originally published by Putnam's in 1968
and long out of print.
-
1995:
Greg Lowe is named American Leatherman, Mon Cherie is named
American Leatherwoman, and Kevin McGraw is named American
Leatherboy.
-
1995:
Jack Stice and tom Stice are named International Master and Slave.
-
1995, Jan:
Publication of The Politics of Pain: Torturers and Their
Masters Edited by Ronald D. Crelinsten and Alex P. Schmid.
-
1995, March 1:
Firebirds founded in Milwaukee
-
1995, March 8:
Hungary legalizes common law same sex marriage.
-
1995, March 25:
The State of Mississippi ratifies the 13th Amendment to
the Constitution of the United States, making slavery illegal
in the state.
-
1995, May:
The Leather Archives and Museum mounts it's third exhibition
during International Mr. Leather weekend.
-
1995, May:
International Mr Leather contest at the Congress Theatre in
Chicago is won by Larry Everett, Mr. Oklahoma Leather.
-
1995, May:
Tim Cousins wins International Bootblack 1995 during IML contest in Chicago.
-
1995, May 26:
The Supreme Court of Canada ruled it is illegal to discriminate
on the basis of sexual orientation.
-
1995, June 1:
Effective date of NLA: San Diego's decision to withdraw from
affiliation with NLA:I. and rename itself Club X.
-
1995, June
Mexico's first March for Human Rights of Lesbians and
Gays is held in Tijuana. [TOL]
-
1995, June 6:
Craig Byrnes introduces his design for the "International
Bear Brotherhood Flag." A design based on the Leather
Pride flag, with seven fur-colored stripes and a paw-print
in the upper left, is accepted. [JWB]
-
1995, Mid:
The German SM group SMarti.e.s. is formed in Hamburg. [wd]
-
1995, July 6:
David Cowan of Indianapolis is selected as the fifth
International Mr. Deaf Leather at the contest in Montreal.
-
1995, July 20-23:
Pat Baille wins International MS. Leather in Chicago.
-
1995, July 30:
The 15 Association, The Outcasts and the Society of Janus
join forces to host SpannerMart 2 in San Francisco, raising
$7,248 for the Spanner Defense Fund.
-
1995, July 31:
Iran's parliament votes to ban the sale of seedless watermelons
because "the unnatural melons spread corruption, robbing
the youths of moral values, promoting homosexuality and asexuality"!
-
1995, Aug:
The Orange County Leather Assembly hosts its second annual
Meet a Master weekend, this year featuring Tony DeBlase.
-
1995, Aug, 18-20:
Fantasy 1995 changes format and includes the first ever
International Mr. Fantasy contest, won by J. D. Buchart.
-
1995, Sept. 1 - 5:
Delta International hosts it's first SM run in Pennsylvania.
The core membership of the group is from Chicago Hellfire Club,
and the Delta run is very similar to Inferno, but in an incredibly
better venue!
-
1995, Sept. 7 - 13:
Chicago Hellfire Club hosts Inferno 24 in Douglas Michigan.
Michael Horowitz receives the Caligula Award and Race Bannon
the J Paul Eaton award.
-
1995, Sept. 23:
At the Mr. Drummer contest in San Francisco, David WW Walker
is named International Mr. Drummer. and Pup is named International
Drummer Boy.
-
1995, Oct. 6-8:
NLA holds its tenth Living in Leather Conference in Portland
OR. Mark Frasier becomes male co-chair. Tony DeBlase and Woody
Bebout are Keynote speakers. Viola Johnson and Larry Townsend
receive the Lifetime Achievement awards. Mr. and Ms NLA are
David Hoffenbacker and Stacey.
-
1995, Nov:
The Leather Archives and Museum moves to a storefront at 5007
N Clark St. and opens its first permanent exhibition gallery.
The first show highlights items from the collection and features
the original artwork of Dom Orejudos. The collection is made
available to researchers.
-
1995, Nov:
The Spanking Club of Los Angeles is founded by Glenn Walker
and five other men.
-
1995, Nov 5:
Motor Sportsclub Amsterdam and the European Council of Motorcycle
Clubs sponsored the 1996 Mr. Europe Leather and Mr. Europe Drummer
contests. Antonio Sanchez of Madrid Spain won both titles and will
represent Europe in both IML and the Mr. Drummer finals in 1996.
-
1995, Nov. 15:
Beyond the Edge Cafe, operated by Alena Gabosch and Denise Pedro,
opens in Seattle. It quickly becomes the meeting place for men
and women into the Leather/SM/Fetish scene. Many special interest
and social groups use it as a meeting space and it is the site
of many scene related art shows and performances. Closes, Jan. 1999.
-
1995:
TLC: A year with a leather club is released. This documentary
video made by Randy Riddle covers a year of activities by the
members of the Tarheel Leather Club.
-
1995:
Desmodus Inc. stops publishing DungeonMaster and The Sandmutopia
Guardian. Harold Cox and Bob Reite, the owners of Checkmate
purchase DungeonMaster and incorporate it into their publication.
Mitch Kessler and Gerrie Blum, a couple from New York who have
been involved in many aspects of the SM community for many years,
purchase The Sandmutopia Guardian and resume publication of that
title.
-
1995, Dec 31:
A New Years Eve SM Play Party is the first of many play
parties in the lower level of the Beyond the Edge Cafe
in Seattle.
1996
Books Published:
-
Leathersex Q & A
by Joseph Bean.
-
The Second Coming - A Leatherdyke Reader,
edited by Pat Califia and Robin Sweeney.
-
My Private Life - Real Experiences of a Dominant Woman
by Mistress Nan.
-
Defending Pornography: Free Speech, Sex, and the
Fight for Women's Rights,
by Nadine Strossen.
-
Ritual Sex
by Tristan Taormino and David Aaron Clark
-
The Gay Almanac, compiled by the National
Museum and Archive of Lesbian and Gay History.
-
Who's A Pretty Boy Then?,
One Hundred and Fifty Years of Gay Life in Pictures
by James Gardiner
-
The Only Reason I Mention This,
A Collection of the Best of The
Wearing The Hides
Columns by Daddy Bob.
-
Hard to Imagine,
gay male eroticism in photography and film from
their beginnings to Stonewall by Thomas Waugh
-
Valentine's Shanghaied
by Valentine Hooven
-
1996:
Formation of Men of Rubber, Chicago; and Wisconsin Leathermen, Milwaukee.
-
1996:
The National Leather Association of Canada (Vancouver),
after years of no contact with any other part of NLA,
changes its name to VantaSM.
-
1996:
South Africa adopts a new constitution which bans
discrimination based on sexual orientation, the first
instance of such laws being incorporated into a
constitution. [TOL]
-
1996:
The German activist Matthias Grimme publishes the SM-Handbuch.
This is the first SM safety book written in German. [wd]
-
1996:
Daniel Sonnenfeld is named International Mr Deaf Leather
and Cool Cat is named the first International Ms Deaf Leather.
-
1996:
Morgana and michael, from Denver, are named International
Master and slave 1996.
-
1996:
Kevin Watson selected as International Mr. Fantasy 1996.
-
1996:
The James C. Hormel Gay and Lesbian Center in the
San Francisco public library opens as the first
separate lesbian and gay collection in a US public
library. [TOL]
-
1996, Jan:
Astride Indricane and Birgita Bohvinger, a lesbian couple,
are legally united under new laws allowing same sex marriage
in Latvia. [TOL]
-
1996, Jan:
Performance Artist Bob "Supermasochist"
Flanagan dies at age 42 of cystic fibrosis. [wd]
-
1996, Jan:
New York's White Columns mounted a show of bright color photographs
of duo John Lovett and Alessandro Codagnone with their in-laws:
Lovett's parents are all about American suburbia, Codagnone's
live in a respectable home outside Milan, Italy. The parents
smile, the boys are smiling too -- and draped in leather
and bondage gear. "We're a couple, just as they're
a couple, and yet who is normal or abnormal?"
says Codagonone.
-
1996, Feb:
The Salt Lake City school board votes to ban all nonacademic
clubs in order to quash the student's Gay-Straight Alliance. [TOL]
-
1996, Feb:
Beasts & Beauties, The Erotic art of Olaf is published
-
1996, Feb 10:
The Leather Journal holds it's first Mr. and Ms Olympus
Leather during the Pantheon Of Leather weekend. Ron Hendon
and Daddy Flo are named to the titles.
-
1996, Feb 11:
Pantheon of Leather IV is held in New Orleans. Woody
Bebout and Sarah Humble are Man and Woman of the year.
Cindy Bookout and Frank Nowicki receive the Reader's
Choice awards. Lifetime Achievement to Don Thompson.
Forbearer to Judy Tallwing-McCarthy, Publisher's award
to Walter Klinger and Gerald LeGault, Club of the Year
to The 15 Association; Club Event of the Year - 25th
Anniversary /ECMC Weekend, Motor Sport Amsterdam,
Nonprofit Organization of the Year Countdown on Spanner
National Effort, Business of the Year to Gauntlet, Inc.,
Business person of the year to Jim McGlade and Chuck
Renslow, International to Dom Bastian and Mary Dante;
Regional awards are: Southeast: Bill Costomiris and
Jack Stice, South Central: Dean Walradt, Rocky Mountain:
Greg Lowe, West Coast: Jeff Henness, Midwest: Jan Hall,
Canadian : Paris Elizabeth Sea. Local Community Service
to Aubrey Hart Sparks.
-
1996, April:
Companions on a Journey hold the first gay conference
in Sri Lanka. [TOL]
-
1996, May:
The Alternate Sources Guide by Trevor Jacques is published.
-
1996, May 8:
Death of Alan Oversby, a.k.a. Mr. Sebastian, Britain's master piercer.
-
1996, May 9:
The Canadian House of Commons passes landmark legislation
banning discrimination against homosexuals. [TOL]
-
1996, May 9:
The US Postal Service announced that it operated a mail order
pornography company for nearly two years as part of an
undercover investigation aimed at people who purchased
illicit materials depicting children in sex acts.
-
1996, May 24:
Denmark provides protection from employment discrimination
for lesbians, gay men and bisexuals. [TOL]
-
1996, May 24-27:
International Mr. Leather weekend in Chicago. The Contest
at the Congress Theatre is won by Joe Gallagher of New
York City
-
1996, May 26:
Todd Nelson is named International Boot Black at the
IML contest in Chicago.
-
1996, June - Aug:
New York's Whitney Museum of American Art features a show
including three of Pal Cadmus' most controversial (at least
in the 1930's when they were painted) works: The Fleet's
In!, Sailors and Floosies, and Shore Leave, all of which
feature ripe male sailor bodies interacting with prostitutes,
and each other.
-
1996, June 4:
Iceland becomes the fourth country to create a domestic
partnership registry for same sex couples. Denmark was
first in 1989, followed by Norway and Sweden. [TOL]
-
1996, June 22:
Beyond the Edge Cafe in Seattle hosts the first in it's
series of Fetish Nights.
-
1996, July:
SMart Bremen-Oldenburg becomes the second German SM group
to be awarded the legal status as an eingetragener Verein
(e.V.). [e.V. = Inc.] [wd]
-
1996, July:
At the Republican National Convention there are four
openly lesbian, gay or bisexual delegates. Later, at
the Democratic convention there are 142. [TOL]
-
1996, Aug:
Republican Congressman Jim Kolbe (of Arizona) is forced
out of the closet after he votes to allow states to ban
same sex marriage. [TOL]
-
1996, Sept 6:
Karl Watkins is found dead in his cell after being convicted
of gross indecency at Wolverhampton Crown Court (England) His
crime? Outraging public decency by trying to make love to
pavements and, in one case, an underpass. Despite psychiatric
help he hadn't been able to shake off his strange fixation.
-
1996, Sept:
Chicago Hellfire Club hosts Inferno 25 in Douglas Michigan.
Peter Fiske receives the Caligula award and Jon Baumgartner
the J. Paul Eaton award.
-
1996, Sept:
San Francisco Leather Pride Week.
-
1996, Sept:
International Mr. Drummer Contest is won by Kyle Brandon,
Mike DeNisco is named International Drummer Boy.
-
1996, Oct:
Jean Beland and Joey Zocher, two lesbians, are elected
Homecoming King and Queen by the student body at University
of Wisconsin, Stevens Point. [TOL]
-
1996, Oct. 3-6:
Living In Leather XI is held in Portland OR. Jan Hall
becomes female co-chair. Lifetime Achievement Awards
are presented to Bob Flanagan and Sheree Rose, and to
Jo Arnone. The International Mr. and Ms NLA titles are
terminated, though Stacey is designated to continue as
an Ambassador of NLA until further notice.
-
1996, Oct. 10:
The Austrian SM-group Eat Me, Beat Me, is founded in
Vienna based on the model of American Munches. [wd]
-
1996, Oct 18 - 20:
Leather University's Dungeon 101, held in Ft. Lauderdale
FL, brings two days of SM instruction by a naturally recruited
faculty. Small class sizes allow hands-on laboratory
participation. And nightly homework assignments are given.
-
1996, Nov:
The German lesbian SM group SMacht! -- "Autonomes Netzwerk
lesbischer und bisexueller Frauen" is founded. This is
the first known lesbian SM group in Germany. [wd]
-
1996, Nov:
Matthew Bourne's new production of Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake
opens in London. Rewritten to feature an all male cast of
swans and a prince who falls in love with the with the Swan
King, who is dressed in black leather, the production is a
hit in London and later in Los Angeles. It opens on Broadway
in Nov. 1998.
-
1996, Nov:
Euro Bear magazine is launched in Cologne, Germany
-
1996, Nov 12:
Death in New York City of leather community activist Barry
Douglas. He served four years as Chairman of GMSMA, was on
the steering committee for the 1987 March on Washington,
co-chaired the National Leather Conference held at that
event, Served on the executive committee for the 1993
March On Washington and on the board of the International
Stonewall 25 commemoration in 1994. In 1988 he was the
first person to be honored as "Man of the Year"
by The Leather Journal. (born 1949)
-
1996, Nov 18:
Death of Phillip Miller, coauthor with Molly Devon of Screw
the Roses, Send Me the Thorns.
-
1996, Dec 14:
Marriage in Portland OR of Sharon Contreas and Lori Michelle
Buckwalter. Buckwalter, still legally a male at the time of
the ceremony, is in the last stages of gender change, which
will be completed shortly after the ceremony. Then two legally
recognized women will be partners in a legally recognized marriage.
-
1996, Dec 16:
Mach #34 is published by Brush Creek Media. The magazine
originated as "Drummer's Big Brother" at Alternate
Publications, becomes International Leatherman's adopted
brother after Desmodus Inc. sells the title to the Bear family
of magazines. [JWB]
1997
Books Published:
-
Between The Cracks,
The Daedalus Anthology of Kinky Verse, edited
by Gavin Geoffrey Dillard.
-
Bound To Be Free: The SM Experience,
by Charles Moser and JJ Madeson.
-
Of Men, Ropes and Remembrance,
stories from Bound & Gagged magazine, by Larry Townsend.
-
Master of Masters
by Larry Townsend
-
The Leatherman's Handbook, Silver Jubilee Edition
by Larry Townsend.
-
Rainbow County
and other stories by Jack Fritscher
-
HorseMen, Leathersex Short Fiction,
edited by Joseph Bean
-
Rasslers, Wranglers & Rough Guys, The Erotic
Art of Matt,
Edited by Joseph W. Bean
-
1997 July 18 - 20:
Genelle Moore of Lincoln NB is named International Ms. Leather.
Her late brother Ron Moore was International Mr. Leather in 1984.
-
1997:
Paul Thomas Anderson's movie Boogie Nights is released to
critical acclaim. The story line is set in the porno movie
industry in Southern California in the 1970's and 80's.
-
1997:
A theme restaurant, La Nouvelle Justine, opens in Manhattan.
The theme is SM, Along with the French cuisine, the staff of
Top identified waitpersons and bottom identified supporting
staff, both male and female, appropriately attired in leather
and paraphernalia, will provide spankings, boot licking and
other services. Prices are on the menu! Most guests sit at
the tables, some eat out of a bowl on the floor.
-
1997:
Tom Trading, Inc. begins marketing a line of designer clothing
for men based upon the clothing worn by men in the art of Tom
of Finland.
-
1997:
The US Supreme Court rules that the Communications Decency
Act, which sought to censor cyberspace, is unconstitutional
interference of free speech.
-
1997:
US Television news programs shock the nation by broadcasting
clips from home videos made in 1991 and 1993 showing US
Marines enthusiastically pounding the sharp metal backs
of awards pins into the bloodied chests of young paratroopers.
Apparently the hazing ritual has been going on for years.
Military officials expressed "shock" and
"dismay".
-
1997:
Pat Boone, pop singing star of the 1950's and 60's tarnished
his squeaky clean Christian image by appearing on the American
Music Awards telecast wearing a leather vest, dog collar,
studded wristbands and flashing his 62 year old bare chest
with temporary tattoos. Trinity Broadcast Network quickly
canceled Boone's weekly gospel music show. On ABC's Good
Morning America Boone later said, "God is into leather.
The first clothes he made for anybody on this planet, he
made them out of leather."
-
1997:
Jim Raymond is named American Leatherman, Leslie Anderson is
named American Leatherwoman, and Max Steiner is named American
Leatherboy.
-
1997:
Patrick Richardson is named International Mr. Deaf Leather
and Cool Cat is selected to continue as a second year with
the title of International Ms Deaf Leather.
-
1997:
Ariq Robinson named International Mr. Fantasy 1997.
-
1997:
Rich Villagarcia is named Mr. Vulcan Rubber 1997, The third
man to hold this title, the first since 1994, and apparently,
the last to hold it.
-
1997, Jan:
Margo Frasier begins her term as Sheriff of Travis
County, Texas. She is the first out lesbian to be elected
sheriff in the US.
-
1997, Jan:
New York S/M Activists formed. by Leonard Dworkin and
Susan Wright. [LW]
-
1997, Jan:
Mike Seimer is named Mr. Mid-Atlantic Leather '97
-
1997, Feb:
The European Court of Human Rights upholds the original
ruling in the British "Spanner" case. [wd]
-
1997, Feb:
The Black Guard of Minneapolis hosts their 20th Black Frost run.
-
1997, Feb:
Mylez Edward and Dauphine Sowell are named Mr. and Ms Olympus
Leather at the contest in New Orleans.
-
1997, Feb:
The Pantheon of Leather Awards are held in New Orleans, winners
are: Man and Woman of the Year to Mark Frazier and Pat Baillie;
Reader's Choice Awards to Jack Stice and David WW Walker (tie)
and to Sarah Humble; Lifetime Achievement to Frank Puckett;
Publisher's award to Jay Allen and Gary Chichester; Forbearer
Award to Tony DeBlase; Club of the Year to Sandia Leather; Non
Profit Organization of the Year to the Leather Archives &
Museum; Club event of the Year 25th Anniversary of The Eulenspiegel
Society; Business of the Year to Leather Rack, DC; Business Person
of the Year to Audrey Joseph; International Award to George
Cameron. Regional Awards: Southeast to Darryl Flick; Rocky
Mountain to Daniel Sonnenfeld; Midwest to Cara Hanes; Northeast
to Michael Horowitz; Mid-Atlantic to Suzette Danick and Joe
Morris; Canadian Regional to Trevor Jacques. The Local Community
Service award to Wes Randall.
-
1997, April:
National Coalition for Sexual Freedom was started in NYC
under the New York SM Activists.
-
1997, April 7:
Death of Jack Stice, International Master 1995. and leather
activist in Atlanta, the southeast, and the nation. [LJ 93]
-
1997, April 19:
The first annual Leather Leadership Conference is held
in New York City. [LW]
-
1997, May:
The Internet SM group Datenschlag and the AG SM&
Oeffen-tlichkeit produce the first map of heterosexual
SM groups in Germany. At this time there are 53 known
groups in 45 cities. [wd]
-
1997, May:
David Cronenberg's film Crash is awarded a Special Jury Prize
at the Cannes Film Festival "for originality, daring and
audacity". Based upon J. G. Ballard's 1973 novel the film
centers on a group of people who are erotically attracted to
car crashes.
-
1997, May:
Gene Harrawood from Bloomington IL is named Mr. Bear Pride 1997 in Chicago.
-
1997, May 12:
The Internet newsgroup soc.subculture.bondage-bdsm is formed. [wd]
-
1997, May:
Details magazine's "1997 College Sex Survey"
reports that 27% of the college men they asked had done
bondage with a partner, 23% more had fantasized about it.
26% of the women had done bondage with a partner and 25%
more had fantasized about it. This is more than 50% of all
college students who have at least fantasized about bondage!
The same questions about SM got identical percentages from
men and women 6% had done it, 11% more had fantasized
-
1997, May 23 -26:
The International Mr. Leather Contest in Chicago names Kevin
Cwayna as IML 1997.
-
1997, May 25:
Driller is named as International Boot Black
during the IML contest in Chicago.
-
1997, June:
The American film parody, Preaching to the Perverted,
opens in the USA. [wd]
-
1997, June:
Mid America Conference names Rob Ridinger of Trident
Windy City to the newly created post of MAC Historian. [RR]
-
1997, June:
German art publisher Taschen publishes a three volume boxed
set of the complete run of Bob Mizer's Physique Pictorial.
(Note: this is a complete run of issues still extant, there
are no surviving copies of a few.
-
1997, June 4:
A full page ad is place in several American newspapers by the
Family Research Council, Concerned Women for America, American
Family Association, Southern Baptist Convention, Focus on the
Family and Coral Ridge Ministries, condemning American Airlines
for pro-homosexual business practices such as fair treatment
of its gay and lesbian employees and its sponsorship of national
and community based gay and AIDS service organizations.
-
1997, June 28:
Master Roger and slave bill are named International Master
and Slave 1997 at the contest in Denver, CO.
-
1997, July 4:
The Eulenspiegel Society's Equestrian Club is founded. [LW]
-
1997, 4th of July weekend:
Kyle Brandon, International Mr. Drummer 1996-97 hosts A
Gathering of Eagles at a private estate in Philadelphia.
An all expense paid party for the country's "Leather
A List" served as the setting at which $1000 checks
were passed out to seven worthy recipients from around the
country. The Leather Archives and Museum was one of the
recipients.
-
1997, July 26:
Joseph W. Bean arrives in Chicago to become the first Executive
Director of The Leather Archives & Museum.
-
1997, Aug 16-17:
The Orange County Leather Assembly hosts its fourth annual
Meet a Master Weekend, this year featuring Guy Baldwin, M.S.
-
1997, Sept:
Atons of Minneapolis celebrate their 25th Anniversary. [RR]
-
1997, Sept.4 - 10:
Chicago Hellfire Club hosts Inferno 26 in Douglas Michigan.
Mel Austin receives the Caligula award and Tom Pscheit the J.
Paul Eaton award.
-
1997, Sept:
Leather Pride week in San Francisco.
-
1997, Sept. 25 -29:
Jeffery Adler of Miami FL is named International Mr. Drummer
and also receives the "Golden Whip Award" (bestowed
by the contestants) the first time any man has received both
of these titles. dan hughes is named International Drummerboy.
-
1997, Oct. 3-5:
Leather University's Dungeon 201, again brings instructors
from all over North America to offer both basic and advanced
courses to leather men and women in Ft. Lauderdale, FL.
-
1997, Oct:
Living in Leather XII is held in Portland. Under bylaws
revisions Mark Frasier becomes President and Jan Hall
becomes vice president and president elect.
-
1997, Oct 17-19:
The Tom of Finland Foundation's Erotic Art Fair, featuring
hundreds of pieces of erotic are in all media by numerous
artists from around the world. Los Angeles, CA.
-
1997, Oct 24 - Nov 2:
Amsterdam Leather Pride Celebration.
-
1997, Oct 27:
The first version of Time Line of Sadomasochism is created
by the Internet group Datenschlag in Germany. (Selected items
indicated by '[wd]' are included in the current Leather
History Timeline.)
-
1997, Oct. 31:
Mr. Drummer Europe contest.
-
1997, Nov:
Formation of The Red Chair, a pansexual group created to
promote Safe Sane and Consensual BDSM in North Central Alabama.
-
1997, Nov 1:
Women's Studies Conference at State University of New York,
New Platz includes coverage of SM and leather topics that
enrage members of the SUNY board of trustees, and the George
Pataki, Governor of the state of New York.
-
1997, Nov 8:
Mr. International Rubber 1998, Christoff Lehner, selected at
a contest at the Cellblock in Chicago.
-
1997, Nov 9:
Mr. World Rubber 1998, Ketith Waltrip, selected at a contest
at Man's Country and sponsored by International Mr. Leather.
-
1997, Nov 14 - 16:
Black Rose X, the tenth anniversary celebration of Black Rose
is held in Washington DC.
-
1997, Dec:
The US Supreme Court hears Joseph Oncale's sexual
harassment case against Sundowner Offshore Services,
Inc. Oncale was harassed by his supervisor and other
workers on an oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico. Lower
courts had ruled that sexual harassment laws required
the predator and victim to be of different genders.
In 1998 the Supreme Court rules in Oncale's favor,
extending sexual harassment law to same sex encounters.
-
1997, Dec 25:
Death of erotic artist Olaf Odegaard (born Dec 15, 1938)
-
1997, Dec 27:
Newsweek includes an article entitled "Lick Me,
Flog Me, Buy Me" on the mainstreaming of SM.
1998
Books Published:
-
Leatherwomen III,
edited by Laura Antoniou.
-
Confessions of a Naked Piano Player
by Torsten Barring.
-
Juice, Electricity for Pleasure and Pain,
by Uncle Abdul.
-
Completely Queer, The Gay and Lesbian Encyclopedia
by Steve Hogan and Lee Hudson.
-
Czar, a novel of Ivan the Terrible
by Larry Townsend.
-
A Contagious Evil, The Mind of a Serial Killer
by Larry Townsend.
-
1998:
Two professors at Pacific University in Forest Grove,
Oregon, receive a $5000. grant from the state organ of
the National Endowment for the Humanities to study
"Mainstreaming and Identity Definition within a
Sadomasochistic Subculture."
-
1998:
Martin Hall is named American Leatherman, Mercea is named
American Leatherwoman, and Terry Sapp is named American Leatherboy.
-
1998:
The World's first gay rights organization, The Scientific
Humanitarian Committee, founded by Magnus Hirschfeld in 1987
and disbanded under Nazi pressure in 1933, is relaunched as
an association of autonomous regional groups.
-
1998, Jan 15-19:
Leather Weekend & Mr. Mid-Atlantic Leather contest in
Washington DC, sponsored by Centaur M.C. Tony Mills of
Miami Beach FL is named Mr, Mid-Atlantic Leather 1998.
-
1998, Jan 8:
Avatar of Los Angeles, one of the continent's oldest SM clubs,
celebrates their 15th anniversary.
-
1998, Jan 12:
NLA: New Orleans Officially accepted as the newest chapter
of NLA: International.
-
1998, Feb 13-15:
Pantheon Of Leather Awards VII in New Orleans. Man and Woman
of the Year: Joseph Bean and Jill Carter; Lifetime Achievement:
Vern Stewart; Reader's Choice Tom Stice and Jill Carter; Forbearer:
Chuck Renslow; Club: Black Rose; Non Profit Organization: David
Weinbaun Foundation; Club event: Black Rose X; Business: Play
House Studios and Gallery; Business person: Philip Turner;
International Award: Jacques Happe of Amsterdam; Couple
of the year (first year for this award): Jill Carter,
Viola Johnson and Queen Cougar. Regional Awards: Southeast:
Tom Stice; South Central: Michelle Buckle; Rock Mountain:
Leslie Anderson; Northwest: Spencer Bergstedt; Western:
Peter Fiske; Midwest: R. J. Chaffin; Northeast: Susan
Wright; Mid-Atlantic: Jack McGeorge; Canadian: tie:
George Cameron and Jay Wagoner. Local Community Service
Award: Billy Lane. Publisher's Awards: Lance Brittain,
Shelley Hagan and Kay Hallanger, and the San Francisco
Eagle.
-
1998, Feb 14:
The Interclub Fund holds the 32nd Annual Motorcycle Awards in
San Francisco. The Golden Gate Guards and its members walk
away with 22 honors, the Constantines received four awards
and the California Eagles MC won three. A lifetime achievement
honor is bestowed upon James Connor of the old Warlocks MC.
The Community Service Award goes to Marcus Hernandez.
-
1998, Feb 15:
Charles Garrett from Orlando and Katherine from Norcross GA
are sashed as Mr. and Ms Olympus Leather during the Pantheon
of Leather Weekend in New Orleans.
-
1998, Feb 24:
Off Center, a web-based radio talk show on Leather/SM/Fetish
and related communities debuts with host Race Bannon interviewing
Joseph Bean, Executive Director of the Leather Archives &
Museum.
-
1998, Mar:
The Leather Journal, issue # 96, appears as a tabloid newspaper,
changing from it's previous magazine image. Commencing with
this issue it will have free distribution in leather bars and
other businesses. but will still be available by subscription.
-
1998, Mar 12:
An exhibit, "Queer & Kinky Danger: Artists Relating
to Leather/SM/Kink" opens at the Gay & Lesbian
Historical Society of Northern California in San Francisco.
It ran through May.
-
1998, April 7:
George Michael, British singer noted for songs such as I
Want Your Sex and Freedom, is arrested for performing a
"lewd act" in Will Rogers Memorial Park in
Beverly Hills. Four days later he appears on CNN to
come out as gay and say that he is currently in a
relationship with a man.
-
1998, April 17 - 19:
Leather Leadership Conference II is held in New York City.
-
1998, April 18:
Black Rose of the Washington DC area Publishes The Black
Rose Guide to Hosting a Leather Event in time to be
available at the Leather Leadership Conference II.
-
1998, April 21:
The National Coalition for Sexual Freedom sponsors the first
Leather Lobby Day, meeting with a number of Congress members
Legislative Assistants to discuss discrimination and hate
crimes involving sexual-minority practices.
-
1998, April 24 - 26:
American Brotherhood Weekend is held in Washington DC.
American Leatherman is Martin Hall from Rhode Island,
American Leatherwoman is Mercea from Chicago and American
Leatherboy is Terry Sapp from Baltimore.
-
1998, April 26:
Death at age 90 of Dominique Aury, who as Pauline Reage,
authored The Story of O.
-
1998, April 17-20:
Indulgence '98, a new men only SM event, modeled after the
Inferno, Delta and Boot Camp events, is held in Ft. Lauderdale
FL, sponsored by the Ft. Lauderdale Leather Guild, Inc.
-
1998, May 23:
The Mr. Ebony in Leather Contest is held at the Leatherneck
bar in Chicago. Andre Macial is named the winner.
-
1998, May 23:
Annual Meeting of the Leather Archives and Museum membership
is held in Chicago. The person occupying the post of executive
director of LA&M is made an ex officio member of the
LA&M board of directors and Joseph Bean moves from his
elected seat on the board to this new one. Chuck Renslow
and Tony DeBlase are reelected to the board and Phil
"Fluffy" Swenson is elected to fill the open
seat. Hilton Flax is elected to fill the remaining portion
of the three year term to which Joseph Bean had been elected.
-
1998, May 24:
The 20th International Mr. Leather Contest held at the Congress
Theatre in Chicago. Tony Mills, Mr. Mid-Atlantic Leather becomes
the 20th man to hold the IML title. A record 55 men compete,
including Billy Lane, Mr. Seattle Leather, the first Female
to Male transsexual to compete (he placed 10th).
-
1998, May 24:
The first public performance of One Common Heartbeat is presented
by composer Gary Aldrich, backed by soloists Joe Ricci and Kevin
Tyrrell and the Chicago Gay Men's Chorus during the International
Mr Leather show in Chicago. The Leather Anthem had been written
by Aldrich at the request of Chuck Renslow, executive producer
of International Mr. Leather.
-
1998, May 24:
The first public presentation of the video documentary In God
we Trust, In Leather we Lust is shown at the International Mr.
Leather contest in Chicago. The video was created by Yves J.
Menou and Cyrl Zajac of The Underground Fire Tribe.
-
1998, May 24:
The International Bootblack Competition is held during the
International Mr. Leather weekend in Chicago. Matthew Duncan
who boot blacks at the DC Eagle and is sponsored by Centaur MC wins.
-
1998, June 5:
Death, in New York City, of Leonard Dworkin, a longtime activist
in the leather/SM community. He was a founder of NY SM Activists;
one of the motive forces behind the Leather Leadership Conferences,
Creator of the NLA Friends on line bulletin board and many others
of similar interest, a long time board member of The Eulenspiegel
Society and editor of that organization's publication, Prometheus.
-
1998, June 11:
Selection of the cover man for the 1999 South of Market Bare
Chest Calendar. This year, sponsored for the first time, by Miller
Brewing Company
-
1998, June 12:
The first issue of Young Deviants, A newsletter aiming to
broaden the Horizons of the inexperienced is published online
by
MMingle16@aol.com.
The quarterly electronic newsletter is intended to provide basic
safety and other information for young people interested in
leather and SM.
-
1998, June 12 - 14:
The third annual Southeast Leatherfest is held in Atlanta, GA
-
1998, July 9:
Handing a resounding victory to the Defendants and a huge
rebuke to the Plaintiff in the Scanlon v. Gay Male S/M
Activists lawsuit, New York City District Court Judge
Constance Baker Motley issues a decision dismissing all
claims against the three individual GMSMA board members
named in the suit and most of the claims against GMSMA,
and only awarded Scanlon $500 - the absolute bare minimum
possible - each for two incidents of copyright infringement.
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1998, July 14:
Chicagoland Discussion Group, a long running pansexual
leather/SM organization holds its last meeting.
-
1998, July 17 - 19:
Megan DeJarlais of Philadelphia is selected International Ms Leather
1998 at the contest in Atlanta.
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1998, July 31 - Aug 2:
Thunder in the Mountains, a pansexual SM conference featuring a
large roster of well known presenters from all over North America
is held in Denver. The nightly Play parties are great fun too.
The Leather Archives and Museum's Traveling exhibit makes its
first appearance.
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1989, Aug 9:
Kink, A Women's Perspective opens at the Leather Archives and
Museum in Chicago. This first special exhibit in the Museum's
gallery space features contributions of women to the art and
literature of kink. The exhibit runs through September 30th.
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1998, Aug 20:
The Lesbian and Gay Rights Chapter of the American Civil
Liberties Union hosts a symposium entitled Leather and the
Law in Los Angeles.
-
1998, Aug 21 - 23:
Ohio Leather Coalition holds the First Annual LeatherFest, Cleveland.
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1998, Sept 4 - 7:
Satyr MC hold their 37th Run to Badger Flats.
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1998, Sept 10 - 17:
Chicago Hellfire Club hosts Inferno 27 in Douglas Michigan.
Michael Blackburn receives the Caligula award and J. Weichert
the J. Paul Eaton award.
-
1998, Sept 26:
The Mr. Drummer finals is held in San Francisco. Herve Bernard
from Paris, France, Mr. Europe Drummer, is selected as the 20th
International Mr. Drummer. Ryan Goldner, Mid-Atlantic Drummerboy
from Philadelphia is selected as Drummerboy of the year.
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1998, Sept 30:
The Leather Archives and Museum in Chicago hosts a party to
mark the closing of it's first special exhibit, and of its
exhibition space, which will be converted to work space to
facilitate handling its ever increasing collection of leather
memorabilia. Traveling exhibits will represent the LA&M at
events around the country and the former exhibition space in
Chicago will be used for cataloging, conservation and
research of the collection.
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1998, Oct 2-4:
Leather University's Dungeon 301 is held in Ft. Lauderdale FL.
This series continues with even more female and bi and heterosexual
participation.
-
1998, Oct 6:
In Laramie Wyoming, Matthew Shepherd, a 21 year old gay man,
and a student at the University of Wyoming, is lured from a
bar by two men, viciously beaten, burned and left tied to a
fence in freezing weather. He dies a few days later. The
incident focuses national attention on Gay bashing and
on hate crimes legislation.
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1998, Oct 9 - 11:
The National Leather Association: International holds Living
in Leather XIII in Dallas Texas. Jan Hall becomes President
and Spencer Bergsted, Vice President and President Elect.
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1998, Oct 16:
A Maryland court voids a decades old law criminalizing
same-partner oral sex. The law, which dated back to 1916,
made it a felony for lesbians and gay men to engage in
oral sex and attached penalties of up to $1000 or 10
years in prison.
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1998, Oct 16 - 18:
Black Rose of Washington DC holds BR '98. BR10, celebrating
the club's 10th anniversary last year was such a success it
will become an annual event!
-
1998, Oct 28 - Nov 2:
Rubber Ball fetish party in London attracts over 3500 guests
from around the world. (LW)
-
1998, Oct 28:
World premier of Razorblade Smile, at Prince Charles Cinema
in London. The film is Jake West's homage to fetish vampires (LW)
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1998, Nov 23:
The Georgia Supreme Court, in a 6 to 1 decision, rules that
the Georgia Sodomy Law is unconstitutional on the grounds of
the 'right of privacy". This is the same law that was
upheld by the US Supreme court in June 1986!
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1998, Nov 26:
Former President of Zimbabwe, Canaan Banana, is convicted
of sodomy and sexual assault against 11 male aides. He
claims that charges against him are fabricated by
supporters of vehemently anti-gay Zimbabwe President
Robert Mugabe.
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1998, Nov 29:
Norbert Lindner, the mayor of Quellendorf, Germany, is
removed from office via voter referendum because of his
plans to undergo gender reassignment surgery.
-
1998, Dec:
The legislature of the Australian state of Tasmania votes to
ban discrimination based upon sexual orientation, among with
19 other grounds, including pregnancy and breast feeding.
-
1998, Dec:
In India the Supreme Court orders the government to provide
bodyguards to the two female leads and the director of the
film Fire, a lesbian themed work that has inflamed the
zealots from the right-wing Shiv Sena part. More than a
dozen cinemas across the nation have been ransacked, and
all those involved in the making of the film have been
threatened. "This film poisons our women. It makes
them curious about something immoral." said a
Shiv Sena spokeswoman.
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1998, Dec 1:
Two gay men "marry" each other at Notary Office
Number 46 in Bogotá Colombia, the same place where heterosexual
marriages take place. Luis Antonio Arias Bolivar and Isauro
Rincon Angarita sign a joint-ownership-of-property contract
stating that they are gay, love each other and desire
economic union. The document was created by gay lawyer
and activist German Humberto Rincon. The two men,
wearing black and beige tuxedos respectively, watch
as Notary Judge Rosa Falla Laiseca reads the document.
Then they sign it, as do the numerous guests/witnesses.
When the Judge signs it becomes official, Photos are
taken and all leave for the reception.
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1998, Dec 9:
The National Assembly of France passes a partnership
registration measure that grants unmarried couples
spousal rights in areas such as inheritance, housing,
taxation, workplace benefits, social security and
social welfare programs.
-
1998, Dec 11:
Police raid the gay bar, Tare, in Mexicali, Mexico, beating
and jailing 14 patrons.
-
1998, Dec 15:
In Canada, Mark Tewksbury, who won three Olympic swimming
medals and set seven world records, comes out as gay. He
had recently lost a six figure contract as a motivational
speaker because he was "too openly gay." So he
decided he needed to open the closet door all the way.
-
1998, Dec 16:
The Supreme Court of the province of British Colombia rules
that the school board of the Vancouver suburb of Surrey
erred in banning books about gay relationships from
kindergarten and first-grade classrooms.
1999
-
1999, Jan:
Members of the former NLA: Portland chapter continue to
meet and, after last month's rescinding of their NLA chapter
charter, rename their group Portland Leather Alliance.
-
1999, Jan:
Beyond the Edge Cafe, Seattle's premier gathering site for
the kinky community, closes its doors.
-
1999, Jan:
Dean Ross of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada is selected as Mr.
Mid-Atlantic Leather. The Centaur MC's Mid-Atlantic Leather
Weekend this year, for the first time, includes a bootblack
competition which is won by a very popular woman, Tracy.
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1999, Feb 12:
Louisiana's sodomy law is removed by a 3-0 ruling of the
state court of appeals.
2000
Books Published:
-
The Academy,
Book 4 in the Marketplace series, by Laura Antoniou (Mystic
Rose Books edition) The Marketplace, reprinted with bonus
story, by Laura Antoniou (Mystic Rose Books edition) The
Slave, reprinted with bonus story, by Laura Antoniou
(Mystic Rose Books edition)
2001
Books Published:
-
The Trainer,
by Laura Antoniou (Mystic Rose Books edition)
Adapted from the "Leather History Timeline"
Compiled by: Tony DeBlase - Provided courtesy of
The Leather Archives & Museum
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