On These Shoulders We Stand: Early roots of Atlanta’s LGBTQ+ movement

10.10.2025    Atlanta INtown Paper    2 views
On These Shoulders We Stand: Early roots of Atlanta’s LGBTQ+ movement

The Atlanta Pride March Photo by Boyd Lewis Touching Up Our Roots The origins of Atlanta and Georgia s LGBTQ rights movement stretch back to the upheavals of the s when a handful of activists began laying the groundwork for visibility and justice Abby Drue Photo by Katie Burkholder Among the earliest leaders was Lorraine Fontana co-founder of the Atlanta Lesbian Feminist Alliance ALFA the state s first lesbian organization Abby Drue became the first openly LGBTQ person to serve at Atlanta City Hall working under three mayors and later leading the Ben Marion Institute for Social Justice Gus Kaufman wrote for the alternative newspaper The Great Speckled Bird and went on to become a visible activist known for his political advocacy Lorraine Fontana Their contemporaries included fellow writers Berl Boykin and Steve Abbott who co-founded the Georgia Gay Liberation Front GGLF with Kaufman later joining Boykin who also helped organize Atlanta s first Pride march recalled the American Civil Liberties Union refusing to secure a permit in declaring You are not a minority That year s march proceeded on sidewalks stopping at traffic lights to avoid arrests for jaywalking In through the tenacity of organizer Charlie St John and others the GGLF eventually obtained a permit for the state s first sanctioned Pride march Other key figures shaped the movement s early years including two noted people of color Mary Louise Covington a New York activist who later moved to Atlanta aided those arrested during the Stonewall Inn uprising by delivering food and clothing to the jailed demonstrators Lendon Sadler remembered as both radical and approachable was an Atlanta native who split time between Georgia and San Francisco influencing early organizing Severin aka Paul Dolan The GGLF also reflected diversity within its leadership Judy Lambert a bisexual married woman co-chaired the group alongside co-founder Bill Smith and her husband Phil Lambert Performer Paul Dolan known by the stage name Severin embodied early non-binary expression through cosmic drag performances that became staples of rallies and benefits The GGLF s internal tensions surfaced by when Smith and Severin clashed over direction and tactics The group dissolved soon after with activists Linda Regnier and Victor Host forming the Gay Rights Alliance to carry the Pride movement forward Atlanta s early activism was also tied to broader cultural movements Writer Steve Abbott who helped ascertained the GGLF before relocating to San Francisco became the subject of national attention decades later through Fairyland his daughter Alysia s memoir adapted into a film produced by Sofia Coppola These pioneers helped establish a foundation for LGBTQ rights in Atlanta Lorraine Abby and Gus remain activists in the current era passing on their knowledge and stories to continue the history of equality and visibility An Atlanta Pride Timeline Steve Abbott and Berl Boykin served on the staff of The Great Speckled Bird an alternative underground weekly newspaper in the late s Both wrote articles and published editorial cartoons advocating for gay and lesbian pride Bill Smith Partnering with region activist Bill Smith the three were the prime movers making the Georgia Gay Liberation Front happen in Notably Smith insisted they call it the Georgia GLF GGLF to encompass the entire state Atlanta Solicitor General Hinson McAuliffe waged war on adult entertainment and on August Atlanta police raided the Ansley Mall Mini Cinema showing of Andy Warhol s Lonesome Cowboys a parody of cowboys in love and lust in the Old West Activist Abby Drue now the CEO of the Ben Marion Institute for Social Justice was entrapped and interrogated in the raid along with the audience of about people The cinema projectionist was arrested and cinema owner George Ellis was later charged with showing pornography Without delay after the raid the GGLF began meeting and organizing as activist groups sprang up nationwide in the wake of the Stonewall Inn riots in New York City in June Dr Ara Dostourian who is now began his tenure as a professor at the University of West Georgia in Carrollton Through The Great Speckled Bird he aligned with Steve Abbott to revealed the first LGBTQ pupil group at West Georgia The GGLF staffed an information table at the annual Piedmont Park Arts Festival For the first anniversary of Stonewall in June a rally was hosted at Piedmont Park including a group of activists touting signs and chanting on Peachtree Street Berl Boykin stated they did not coordinate a march for fear no one would show up and they would embarrass themselves Police harassment continues as LGBTQ clubs are targeted The Club Centaur located near Peachtree and th Street headlines drag queens Phyllis Killer Billy Jones and Diamond Lil Phil Forrester and becomes the focus of a street riot leading to Mayor Sam Massell closing the Centaur in November The GGLF convenes its first major populace meeting on Feb at the Morningstar Inn in Emory Village adjacent to Emory University It turns into a raucous town hall meeting as people vent about prejudice and discrimination Berl Boykin becomes the organization s legal researcher and Steve Abbott its publicist Bill Smith and A McClane are chosen co-chairs The GGLF applies for a permit for a Gay Pride parade in June but the City of Atlanta refuses them a permit to march Nevertheless a group of protesters Boykin says I know it was I counted them twice gathers on Peachtree Street near Ponce and marches to Piedmont Park on June Under the scrutiny of the police the marchers squeeze on the sidewalks and stop for every traffic light for fear they will be arrested for jaywalking A celebratory rally awaits in Piedmont Park where guerrilla theatre mocks the ongoing war in Vietnam and attacks on LGBTQ people On July Berl Boykin Bill Smith and GGLF leader Klaus Smith avail themselves of Gov Jimmy Carter s open meetings program and press for equal access to employment and housing and repeal of Georgia s sodomy law Carter thunders No and has them thrown out of his office The GGLF receives a permit for the Pride march with the help of newcomer and activist Charlie St John A Pride march in the streets is not embraced by all The Sweet Gum Head bar and The Cove bar toss GGLF members out for leafleting about Pride Cove manager Frank Powell is rabidly against general demonstrations for gay rights Yet hundreds turn out for Atlanta s first Gay Pride in the streets Bill Smith is caught on camera in extreme close-up bellowing What do we want Gay rights When do we want them NOW GGLF co-chair Judy Lambert leads the march with her husband Phil Lambert as a proudly bisexual married couple Atlanta native Paul Dolan known as Severin entertains the rally in cosmic drag as a bearded and mustached man in an evening gown trilling his own compositions I m Tired of Straight Man F cking Over Me among them Rev John Gill of Atlanta s Metropolitan Public Church marches with majority of of MCC absent He and GGLF writer Dave Hayward guest on Georgia Tech s pupil station WREK after the march The Great Speckled Bird gives Pride their cover and their centerfold insert Meanwhile the Board of Regents at the University of Georgia cracks down and throws UGA s Committee on Gay Tuition off campus This stoked mass protests and a fundraising event in Athens by drag icon Diamond Lil Later in the GGLF succumbs to dissension and in-fighting and Severin leads a group of folks out of the group The GGLF hobbles on to mount another Gay Pride in June and then disbands A group of Lesbian women march with paper bags over their heads in protest for those who cannot march openly Mayor Sam Massell anoints the first openly gay anything as he appoints Charlie St John to the Atlanta Area Relations Commission In Atlanta Pride continued under new coordinators Linda Regnier and Victor Host which would usher in the Pride Celebration that continues years later Find out more at Touching Up Our Roots Georgia s LGBTQ Story Project at touchingupourroots net The post On These Shoulders We Stand Early roots of Atlanta s LGBTQ movement appeared first on Rough Draft Atlanta

Similar News

Suffolk County Sheriff Steven Tompkins wants extor
Suffolk County Sheriff Steven Tompkins wants extortion charges dismissed

Suffolk County Sheriff Steven Tompkins has asked to have his extortion charges dismissed, denying an...

10.10.2025 0
Read More
Chik-fil-A lands at Logan Airport
Chik-fil-A lands at Logan Airport

A second location will open in Terminal E in 2026. The post Chik-fil-A lands at Logan Airport appear...

10.10.2025 0
Read More
Sixers rookie VJ Edgecombe (hip) out for preseason home opener
Sixers rookie VJ Edgecombe (hip) out for preseason home opener

No. 3 overall pick VJ Edgecombe did not practice on Thursday because of left hip soreness. His Phila...

10.10.2025 0
Read More