The Mattachine Society, and the Post-Stonewall Shift
…crucial turning point in our neighborhoods on July 16, 1969, which altered their path forever. A copy of the Mattachine Review, 1959 The Mattachine Society was formed in secret in…
Read More…crucial turning point in our neighborhoods on July 16, 1969, which altered their path forever. A copy of the Mattachine Review, 1959 The Mattachine Society was formed in secret in…
Read MoreAs Village Preservation prepares to unveil a plaque commemorating the “Sip-In” at Julius’ Bar on April 21, 1966, one might wonder about the Mattachine Society of New York, which organized…
Read More…targeted gay rights activism led by the Mattachine Society, the events set forth at Stonewall launched the movement into the popular consciousness. There was no turning back from Stonewall, but…
Read More…1966 members of the New York Chapter of the Mattachine Society staged a “Sip-In” at the bar which was to change the legal landscape. Dick Leitsch and Craig Rodwell, the…
Read More…despite the growing gay clientele at the bar. On April 21, 1966, three gay men from the New York City Mattachine Society organized a “Sip-In” (a variation on the ubiquitous…
Read More…American South. It was lead by chaptered, secretive organizations, such as the Mattachine Society and the Daughters of Bilitis, as part of a carefully calibrated effort to reframe homosexuality as…
Read More…of the New York chapter of the Mattachine Society staged a “Sip-In” that helped establish the right of homosexuals to be served in licensed premises in New York (the existing…
Read More…group within the Mattachine Society – one of the earliest American gay rights organizations – wanted to protest against the Women’s House of Detention in support of Shakur and Joan…
Read More…gay bar. But its claim as one of the most important LGBT landmarks extends far beyond that. In 1966, the Mattachine Society, an early LGBT rights organization, set about to…
Read More…higher than 15 cents these days. [credit: Ephemeral New York]On April 21, 1966, three activists from the Mattachine Society, an early gay rights organization, walked up to the bar and…
Read More…about the 1966 ‘sip-in’ by the Mattachine Society (an early gay and lesbian civil rights organization.) This protest led to the 1967 ruling that required ‘substantial evidence’ of indecent behavior,…
Read More…of Billitis publication. The initially tiny chapter shared an office with the gay male organization Mattachine and bounced around the city for the next 13 years. The chapter’s final location…
Read More…On April 21, 1966, members of the New York chapter of the Mattachine Society staged a “Sip-In” and that helped establish the right of homosexuals to be served in licensed…
Read More…New York chapter. The Ladder, the Daughters of Billitis publication. The initially tiny chapter shared an office with the gay male organization Mattachine and bounced around the city for the…
Read More…active participant and organizer of the Mattachine Society in the 1950’s, as well as a spiritual counselor for the Daughters of Bilitis. In 1977, due to his homosexuality, he was…
Read More…sources. A conspicuous headline from a New York Times article on the Sip In. The story goes that members of the New York City Mattachine Society, a national gay rights…
Read More…service at a 1966 Sip In at Julius’. On April 21, 1966, members of the New York chapter of the Mattachine Society staged a “Sip-In” and that helped establish the…
Read More…the gay male organization Mattachine and bounced around the city for the next 13 years. The chapter’s final location was in a loft at 141 Prince Street, in a building…
Read More…29, 1969, almost exactly two months to the day before the Stonewall rebellion took place. Photo by Diana Davies, 1969. Source: NYPL. Members of the Mattachine Society – the group…
Read More…few years before the Stonewall Riots, the Mattachine Society challenged the New York State law that prohibited alcohol sales to homosexuals. You can read more about that here and here….
Read More…the window, which reads: “We homosexuals plead with our people to please help maintain peaceful and quiet conduct on the streets of the Village—Mattachine”. This is obviously extraordinary historic significance….
Read More…role in the struggle for equality through a timeline gallery from the Mattachine Society and the Daughters of Bilitis in the 1950s, to the Stonewall Uprising in the 1960s, to…
Read More…of the oldest continuously operating bars in New York City. By the 1950s, the bar had begun to attract gay customers, and in 1966, the Mattachine Society, one of the…
Read More…Front (GLF), the Mattachine Society, and GAA (the Gay Activist Alliance), a “militant, non-violent organization dedicated exclusively to the attainment of civil and social rights for gays.” Many organizers involved…
Read More…on April 21, 1966, where members of New York’s Mattachine Society, a group of homosexual activists, pushed the limits at this still active gay bar. And in 2009, GVSHP featured…
Read More…Julius’ Bar, the oldest gay bar in New York and the place where the Mattachine Society held its 1966 “Sip-In,” was determined to be eligible for the State and National…
Read More…activism. As a volunteer for the New York chapter of the Mattachine Society, a political group advocating for gay rights, Rodwell believed that the group spent too much time indoors…
Read More…York chapter of the Mattachine Society staged a “Sip-In” and that helped establish the right of homosexuals to be served in licensed premises in New York. In 2012 Village Preservation…
Read More…the struggle for the rights and well-being of gay men and lesbians since the mid-1950s, having served as a board member of the New York Mattachine Society and a spiritual…
Read More…riots of 1969, Martello, who identified as gay, attended an organizing meeting of the Mattachine Society. While the group had gained increasing popularity among mostly gay men after Stonewall, Martello soon realized his differences with…
Read More…rose. Lenape Settlement Manhattan, Courtesy of NYPL Digital Collections. 159 West 10th Street Julius’ Bar was the site of the New York City Mattachine Society “Sip-in” on April 21, 1966….
Read More…Project with special guest Dick Leitsch. On April 21, 1966, Dick Leitsch and other members of the Mattachine Society, an early LGBT rights organization, staged the now famous Sip-In at…
Read More…public and politically radical activist methods. These groups have sometimes been called the “Gay Liberation Movement” to distinguish it from the earlier, less activist “Homophile Movement” of the Mattachine Society…
Read More…and the bars and other spaces where they openly gathered. On April 21, 1966, members of the Mattachine Society — Dick Leitsch, Craig Rodwell, John Timmons and Randy Wicker —…
Read More…South, four members of the early gay-rights group the Mattachine Society on April 21, 1966, traveled to various city bars to document the discrimination they faced. Their last stop was…
Read More…and Marion Glass founded the group’s New York chapter, which shared an office with the gay male organization the Mattachine Society. The initially tiny chapter bounced around the city for…
Read More…papers and photographs Diana Davies photographs, 1965-1978 The Emilio Sanchez Private Sketches Gran Fury International Gay Information Center Collection. Mattachine Society, Inc. of New York Records, 1951-1976 Particular Voices: Portraits…
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