Bay State Marauders 1st Anniversary, 2004
<p><i><span style="font-weight:400;">Who made this?</span></i></p>
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<div class="freebirdFormviewerViewItemsTextShortText freebirdFormviewerViewItemsTextDisabledText freebirdThemedInput">Tom Beauchamp-Arnold (member of the club)</div>
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<br /><p><i><span style="font-weight:400;">Where was it made or acquired?</span></i></p>
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<div class="freebirdFormviewerViewItemsTextShortText freebirdFormviewerViewItemsTextDisabledText freebirdThemedInput">Boston Ramrod 1254 Boylston Street, Boston MA</div>
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<p><i><span style="font-weight:400;">Story<br /><br /></span></i></p>
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<div class="freebirdFormviewerViewItemsTextLongText freebirdFormviewerViewItemsTextDisabledText freebirdThemedInput">This picture is of the 1st Anniversary celebration held at the Boston Ramrod. This picture is of some of the members of the club. From left to right: David Lusignan, Jim Mills, Joe Loydd, Scott Erickson, Paul Beauchamp – Arnold, Rob Claffie. Other club that were in attendance that night: Fit Like a Glove, Kindred of Maine, The Imperial Court of Massachusetts, Boston Bears, and MOB. This is part of a larger collection of picture from the club in digital format. The Bay State was founded on March 1st 2003 in Quincy. The first meeting had 6 members in attendance. The club is currently 17 years old and has 42 full members and 10 associate members.</div>
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28 February 2004
Scott Erickson, Boston, MA, <a href="https://twitter.com/LEATHERSAIL">@LEATHERSAIL</a> (Twitter)
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Bay State Marauders Sweet Sixteen Run, 2019
<p><i><span style="font-weight:400;">Where was it made or acquired?</span></i></p>
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<div class="freebirdFormviewerViewItemsTextShortText freebirdFormviewerViewItemsTextDisabledText freebirdThemedInput">The Crown & Anchor Provincetown, Massachusetts</div>
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<br /><p><i><span style="font-weight:400;">Story<br /><br /></span></i></p>
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<div class="freebirdFormviewerViewItemsTextLongText freebirdFormviewerViewItemsTextDisabledText freebirdThemedInput">In March of 2019 the Bay State Marauders celebrated their 16th Anniversary in Provincetown, Massachusetts. This was a 3 day event with 80 people in attendance. We had 18 clubs in attendance. Those would include: Bucks MC, C.O.M.M.A.N.D MC, Castaway MC, Centaur MC, DC Bear Club, Empire City MC, Excelsior MC, Fits Like A Glove (FLAG), Harbor Masters of Maine, Harness Albany, Iron Guard BC, Knight Hawks of Virginia, Long Island Ravens, Pennsmen, Philadelphians M.C., The ShipMates Club of Baltimore, Three Rivers Leather Club, Wicked PAH. This picture is of the full membership of the Marauders, plus the associates. This is part of a larger volume of pictures of the club in digital format.</div>
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30 March 2019
Scott Erickson, Boston, MA, <a href="https://twitter.com/LEATHERSAIL">@LEATHERSAIL</a> (Twitter)
Copyright restrictions may apply. Visit https://historyproject.omeka.net/rights-and-reproductions for more information and to review The History Project's takedown policy.
BEING TRANS IN THE 1980s - NIGHTLIFE, PART 1 and 2
BEING TRANS IN THE 1980S - NIGHTLIFE, PART 1
I'll admit, nightlife in the 80s for a T girl was F-A-N-T-A-S-T-I-C. Gone was the strict binary sexuality of the disco era yet leftover was their repurposed venues. In Boston these became inhabited by Nietzche reading surrealists, new wavers, punks, glam rockers, nihilists, sissy boys, androgenists, gender benders, and above all transs3xuals. We Ts were the furthest extent forward of challenging the status quo and we punched-out angrily at the establishment! Manhattan was always haute with the Pyramid Club and the utterly, utterly decadent Limelight. But in my teens and 20s, the hard avant-gardne nighttime cutting edge of Boston, with its 300k students, had a luscious & magnificent texture. The concoction was a Salvador Dali aesthetic with evolved mods fasion and punk overtones. Clubs like Axis, Man-Ray (Cambridge), Bat Cave, and the Haymarket allowed us early Ts to move out of drag bars and into the mainstream. Precursors to rave warehouse parties provided all night fantasy wonderlands. And we were courted by the club owners!!! I NEVER, EVER paid a cover and we'd immediately be ushered to the front of the line. Bouncers would, unsolicited, hand us admission free lifetime cards. My fondest, youthful T memories are of this nightlife time with my friends!! ♥♥
BEING TRANS IN THE 1980S - NIGHTLIFE, PART 2
The best, best nightclub I went to as preop T was the Haymarket in Boston's Combat Zone. It was the old ballroom of the derelict Hotel Avery (pictured), back when Boston's fabled entertainment district was something other than racy sleaze. The Haymarket was in no way a drag/trannie bar, although a ~quarter of the clientele were T. It was a delightful concoction of equal parts gay, bi, T, chasers, hetero, lesbian, black, white, Asian, and Latino. It was mirrored all around from its previous incarnation as a disco. The music was funk and hip hop and the people were beautiful (a doorman culled the crowd). There was a kindred sense of LGBT community, especially when it closed at 2am and throngs of patrons would dump into the parking lot and just hangout w/each other until the police moved us on.
For a 22yo T girl the Haymarket was a perfect place to practice passing away from the dramatic gesticulating of drag queens and awkward frumpiness of xdressers. Nowadays lots of young Ts live 24/7 as female w/o completely passing. Back then a T needed to be unclockable to hold a job or even walk around. LGBT nightclubs/bars were the place to try different looks and acquire feminine experience. In the 80s one could start at drag bars, then progress to LGBT nightclubs, and then hetero new wave/punk clubs. All of which were accepting, assuming one looked the part.
The Haymarket was my bridge between LGBT and heterosexual clubs. The Ts were gorgeous and mostly passable. I started passing at the Haymarket, to the point where men were asking me what I was doing there. It was safe, for the Combat Zone, and had a free late night parking lot close by. The cover was pricey, which kept away most T hookers, but I got in mostly for free. All my friends partied there and it was sooo much fun! Years passed and the dodgy neighborhood morphed way upscale. The Haymarket is now a Ritz Carlton hotel but has a bar named the Avery Bar where the beloved Haymarket once stood.
Petra
Petra
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BEING TRANS IN THE 1980S - PAGE & PETRE
Page and I were like matching bookends. We both had rebelous platinum blonde hair, slender figures, and were fond of black outfits & light foundation to contrast our heavyily winged eyes & painted lips. Difference was Page had a fashion model's photogenic stature and was ten times more fabulous than I could ever hope to be. The gay men loved her and Ts envied her. Her look, ingeniously patterned after Grace Jones, was right-on-time for the 80s and she was the center of attention at EVERY nightclub.
We met when I was 21yo in the type of seedy San Francisco trannie bar which would have mortally shocked our parents. We were both from New England, same ~age, played high school tennis, and went to prestigious private schools yet found ourselves in a recklessly dangerous, hooker infested trannie bar in SF's infamous Tenderloin. We became instant friends, oblivious to, or liking, the desperate insanity raging around us. We both lived in dodgy SF residence hotels, sleazy places where meth needles were tucked into every crevice, and lived day-to-day. She hooked and I worked at an electronics store for min wage. We hung out at each other's apartments talking fashion & makeup, when she didn't have a "client", and played competitive tennis matches against each other at a local park, which she always won.
A couple of years after I moved back to Boston, age 23ish, Page called me and wanted to move to Boston too. I set her up with a residence and showed her the city. First stop was the local T bar Jacques on Piedmont Street. I remember we were at a drag show and the spotlight randomly landed on Page. Every T and drag queen in the packed nightclub jaws dropped - they had never seen such a stunningly beautiful, exotic trans woman! For the next few years Page and I carved a trail of fashion mayhem throughout Boston with our friends Robert, Xavier, Lenny, Greg, and an African dictator's drag queen son. Sparing NO ONE from a visual onslaught of hard-edge New Wave fashion!
Eventually, after much prodding by Boston's gay men that she was TOO fabulous for Boston and MUST move to Manhattan, she migrated to NYC. I was extremely wary. I could already see a budding drug habit and I worried Page would get hooked on H in Gotham. She did, albeit after being queen of the Manhattan nightlife, a cage dancer at the Limelight, and a feature model in an Absolute Vodka campaign. In a few years, after I fully transitioned, I also moved to NYC and looked Page up. But the friendship was NOT the same.
In my very early 20s I was not passable but Page was mostly passable and utterly fabulous. In a way, I was her admiring little sister (Jan Brady to Marsha Brady as she used to kid me). Then when I moved to NYC I was say 99.9% unclockable but she was still only say 95% unclockable. Silly, but we were a bit competitive w/each other and she could not be deep stealth like myself. Seeing how I leapfrogged her caused tension. When Page heard I got my SRS she freaked and soon after booked her surgery.
Yet the surgery was tragically wrong for Page. She later told me the "only" reason she got her surgery was because I got mine! Which was obviously unfair to suggest my SRS had such a causal relationship on her SRS. But I understood Page was in the throes of H addiction and her promising life had evaporated. Reality was NEITHER of us were to blame. It was the intolerance & ignorance of the times which prevented Page from getting the care she DESERVED for both her gender dysphoria and her consequential substance abuse! Page overdosed at age 41 in 2002, death by misadventure. Even famous Village Voice columnist Michael Musto wrote about Page as a "true lady" after her passing.
I write this in memory of Page, RIP dear friend.
Petra
1988, Boston
Petra
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Benjamin Thompson candid portrait
Human Rights Commission
Benjamin Thompson
Benjamin Thompson, senior advisor on equal rights for the city of Boston, Human Rights Commission
Debbie Rich
The History Project: Documenting LGBTQ Boston
1985
Copyright 1985 Debbie Rich All Rights Reserved.<br /><span>Contact </span><a href="mailto:info@historyproject.org" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">info@historyproject.org</a><span> for more information.</span>
GCN.ORG.00323
Betsy Rose & Cathy Winter "Sweet Sorcery" Flyer
Rose, Besty
Winter, Cathy
LGBTQ Musicians
Folk Music
Flyer for Betsy Rose & Cathy Winter's album "Sweet Sorcery."
Unknown
Gay Community News (publication and photographs), 1973-1999
The History Project
ca. 1980
Digital content made available by The History Project on DOCUMENTED is intended for personal research and educational purposes. Commercial use or distribution of this content is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder. The History Project holds copyright to select content made available in DOCUMENTED. Copyright to other content may be held by authors, artists, or their heirs, or may be in the public domain. Requests to reproduce, distribute, or publish content in The History Project should be sent to info@historyproject.org.
Black-and-White Photograph
8 x 10 inches
English
Still Image
GCN.PPL-00.527
Bette Midler at the Boston Opera House
Trousdale, Neal
Midler, Bette
Boston Opera House
Bette Midler performs at the Boston Opera House.
Neal Trousdale
Gay Community News (publication and photographs), 1973-1999
The History Project
1983-03-21
Copyright Neal Trousdale 1983.
Digital content made available by The History Project on DOCUMENTED is intended for personal research and educational purposes. Commercial use or distribution of this content is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder. The History Project holds copyright to select content made available in DOCUMENTED. Copyright to other content may be held by authors, artists, or their heirs, or may be in the public domain. Requests to reproduce, distribute, or publish content in The History Project should be sent to info@historyproject.org.
Black-and-White Photograph
5 x 8 inches
English
Still Image
GCN.PPL-00.446
Boston, MA
Bette Midler Singers at the Boston Opera House
Trousdale, Neal
Midler, Bette
Boston Opera House
Bette Midler backup singers in wheelchairs at the Boston Opera House.
Neal Trousdale
Gay Community News (publication and photographs), 1973-1999
The History Project
1983-03-21
Copyright Neal Trousdale 1983.
Digital content made available by The History Project on DOCUMENTED is intended for personal research and educational purposes. Commercial use or distribution of this content is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder. The History Project holds copyright to select content made available in DOCUMENTED. Copyright to other content may be held by authors, artists, or their heirs, or may be in the public domain. Requests to reproduce, distribute, or publish content in The History Project should be sent to info@historyproject.org.
Black-and-White Photograph
5 x 8 inches
English
Still Image
GCN.PPL-00.445
Boston, MA
Beverly Smith at New Words
Smith, Barbara
Combahee River Collective
Black Feminism
Lesbian Feminism
Black LGBTQ+ People
Beverly Smith reading at New Words Bookstore, Somerville, MA.
N. Wedule
Gay Community News (publication and photographs), 1973-1999
The History Project
ca. 1979
Copyright N. Wedule.
Digital content made available by The History Project on DOCUMENTED is intended for personal research and educational purposes. Commercial use or distribution of this content is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder. The History Project holds copyright to select content made available in DOCUMENTED. Copyright to other content may be held by authors, artists, or their heirs, or may be in the public domain. Requests to reproduce, distribute, or publish content in The History Project should be sent to info@historyproject.org.
Black-and-White Photograph
8 x 10 inches
English
Still Image
GCN.PPL-00.635
Somerville, MA
Beverly Smith speaking at Boston Pride, 1979.
Smith, Beverly
Ketover, Dede
Combahee River Collective
Black Feminism
Lesbian Feminism
Boston Pride
Black LGBTQ+ People
Beverly Smith and two unidentified demonstrators, possibly Barbara Smith, speaking at Boston Pride, 1979.
Dede Ketover
Gay Community News (publication and photographs), 1973-1999
The History Project
1979
Copyright Dede Ketover 1979.
Digital content made available by The History Project on DOCUMENTED is intended for personal research and educational purposes. Commercial use or distribution of this content is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder. The History Project holds copyright to select content made available in DOCUMENTED. Copyright to other content may be held by authors, artists, or their heirs, or may be in the public domain. Requests to reproduce, distribute, or publish content in The History Project should be sent to info@historyproject.org.
GCN Vol. 6 No. 48
Black-and-White Photograph
8 x 10 inches
English
Still Image
GCN.PPL-00.637
Boston, MA
Beverly Smith Speech
Smith, Beverly
Wulf, Laura
Combahee River Collective
Black Feminism
Lesbian Feminism
Black LGBTQ+ People
Beverly Smith speaking into microphones an an unknown event.
Laura Wulf
Gay Community News (publication and photographs), 1973-1999
The History Project
ca. 1985
Copyright Laura Wulf.
Digital content made available by The History Project on DOCUMENTED is intended for personal research and educational purposes. Commercial use or distribution of this content is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder. The History Project holds copyright to select content made available in DOCUMENTED. Copyright to other content may be held by authors, artists, or their heirs, or may be in the public domain. Requests to reproduce, distribute, or publish content in The History Project should be sent to info@historyproject.org.
Black-and-White Photograph
8 x 10 inches
English
Still Image
GCN.PPL-00.636
Bill Mulkern and Diane Green of LAGMA smiling
LAGMA
Diane Green
Bill Mulkern
The History Project: Documenting LGBTQ Boston
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GCN.ORG.00351
Billy Callum at Gay Pride March
Billy died at age 35 yrs. in 1985 in Boston. In this photo he is 20 years of age (1970) at his first Gay Pride Parade in NYC. He was an aspiring actor going to the Circle in the Square acting school. Billy died of AIDS in Boston on October 3, 1985. He moved from NYC to live with me, his sister, when he was diagnosed. AIDS Action Committee, Dr. Groopman, Larry Kessler and his buddy, Dan Karl Sorensen supported Billy and his family and we will be forever grateful. The early days of the epidemic were scary and we would be lost without AAC. Thank you. (Image and information contributed by Joanne Callum Powers, sister to Billy Callum)
unknown
1970
Powers, Joanne Callum
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Birth Certificate of Gordon Copeland (Charles' partner)
This is Gordon's birth certificate. He was born on June 17, 1931 in Providence RI. His father, also named Gordon, was born in Chatham, England, and his mother, Marie Thomas, was born in Syracuse, New York.
State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations
July 1931
8.5" x 11"
Birthday card from Allan Searcy to Gordon Copeland, June 20, 1974
Birthday card from Allan to Gordon, apologizing for it being a couple days late, dated June 20, 1974.
Allan Searcy
June 20, 1974
Black and White Men Together march with banners
Black and White Men Together
Black and White Men Together banner over a group of men carrying signs and marching down a street.
Sharon Page
The History Project: Documenting LGBTQ Boston
1986-06-29
Copyright Sharon Page.<br /><span>Contact </span><a href="mailto:info@historyproject.org" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">info@historyproject.org</a><span> for more information.</span>
GCN.ORG.00095
Black and white photograph of a living space with a painted portrait of Gordon Copeland.
This small, square, black and white Kodak Velox with scalloped edges appears to be of a living space (lamp, table, candles, vase, record player and vinyl records) with a painted portrait of a man posed in a chair, looking back over his shoulder at the viewer. The subject of the portrait is most likely Gordon Copeland.
Board members of The Center celebrates its second anniversary
The Center
Craig Bailey
Larry Basile
Robert Lee
Steve Tierney
Carol Wessling
A line of people smiling and clapping at a podium with a microphone.
Laura Wulf
The History Project: Documenting LGBTQ Boston
1991-09-26
<span>Photo by Laura Wulf.<br />Contact </span><a href="mailto:info@historyproject.org" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">info@historyproject.org</a><span> for more information.</span>
Book design for <em>The Prince and the Pretender</em> by Vince Lardo
Alyson Publications
Vince Lardo
Alyson Publications
The History Project: Documenting LGBTQ Boston
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GCN.ORG.00063
Book designs for <em>Dancer Dawkins and the California Kid</em> by Willyce Kim, <em>Deadly Lies</em> by John Preston and for <em>Firestorm</em>
Alyson Publications
The History Project: Documenting LGBTQ Boston
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GCN.ORG.00072
Book designs for Kairos by Zalmon O. Sherwood, <em>Safestud: the Safesex Chronicles of Max Exander</em>, and <em>Finale</em> edited by Michael Nava
Alyson Publications
Zalmon O. Sherwood
The History Project: Documenting LGBTQ Boston
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GCN.ORG.00073
Book jacket for <em>Dancer Dawkins and the California Kid</em> by Willyce Kim
Alyson Publications
The History Project: Documenting LGBTQ Boston
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GCN.ORG.00078
Book jacket for <em>Deadly Lines</em> by John Preston
Alyson Publications
The History Project: Documenting LGBTQ Boston
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GCN.ORG.00075
Book jacket for <em>Firestorm</em> by Gerald Wenning
Alyson Publications
The History Project: Documenting LGBTQ Boston
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GCN.ORG.00077
Book jacket for <em>Long Time Passing: Lives of Older Lesbians</em> by Marcy Adelman
Alyson Publications
The History Project: Documenting LGBTQ Boston
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GCN.ORG.00074
Book jacket for <em>The Prince and the Pretender</em> by Vince Lardo
Alyson Publications
Vince Lardo
The History Project: Documenting LGBTQ Boston
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GCN.ORG.00076
Book jacket for <em>The Two of Us</em> by Larry J. Uhrig
Alyson Publications
The History Project: Documenting LGBTQ Boston
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GCN.ORG.00079
Book jacket for <em>We Can Always Call Them Bulgarians</em> by Kaier Curtin
Alyson Publications
The History Project: Documenting LGBTQ Boston
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GCN.ORG.00080
Boston AIDS walk participants walking down Beacon Street
AIDS Action Committee
AIDS Walk
Crowd of Boston AIDS Walk participants stretches down Beacon Street in Boston with the giant Citgo sign in the distance.
The History Project: Documenting LGBTQ Boston
1992
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GCN.ORG.00037
Boston Area Gay School Workers demonstrators
Boston Area Gay Schoolworkers
Group of men and women outside of a building with banners for Boston Area Gay Schoolworkers.
Tim Grant
The History Project: Documenting LGBTQ Boston
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GCN.ORG.00101
Boston Area Gay Schoolworkers demonstration
Boston Area Gay Schoolworkers
Boston Area Gay and Lesbian Schoolworkers
Demonstrators from the Boston Area Gay Schoolworkers standing under a balcony on which a cameraman can be seen filming.
Tim Grant
The History Project, Inc.
no date
Please credit Tim Grant. Email info@historyproject.org for information about rights, reproductions, etc.
GCN.ORG.00103
Boston Area Human Rights members Peter Maroon and Millie
Boston Area Human Rights
Peter Maroon
Peter Maroon (far left) and a woman named Millie smiling in a crowd and wearing a BAHR badge.
The History Project: Documenting LGBTQ Boston
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GCN.ORG.00104
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians (BAGMAL) Newsletter, April 1987
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians
Queer Asian Pacific-Islander Alliance
1987-04-01
Email info@historyproject.org for information about rights, reproductions, etc.
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians (BAGMAL) Newsletter, April 1988
1988-04-01
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians (BAGMAL) Newsletter, August 1987
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians
Queer Asian Pacific-Islander Alliance
1987-08-01
Email info@historyproject.org for information about rights, reproductions, etc.
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians (BAGMAL) Newsletter, December 1987
1987-12-01
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians (BAGMAL) Newsletter, February 1987
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians
Queer Asian Pacific-Islander Alliance
1987-02-01
Email info@historyproject.org for information about rights, reproductions, etc.
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians (BAGMAL) Newsletter, February 1988
1988-02-01
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians (BAGMAL) Newsletter, January 1988
1988-01-01
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians (BAGMAL) Newsletter, June 1987
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians
Queer Asian Pacific-Islander Alliance
1987-06-01
Email info@historyproject.org for information about rights, reproductions, etc.
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians (BAGMAL) Newsletter, March 1987
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians
Queer Asian Pacific-Islander Alliance
1987-03-01
Email info@historyproject.org for information about rights, reproductions, etc.
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians (BAGMAL) Newsletter, March 1988
1988-03-01
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians (BAGMAL) Newsletter, May 1987
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians
Queer Asian Pacific-Islander Alliance
1987-05-01
Email info@historyproject.org for information about rights, reproductions, etc.
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians (BAGMAL) Newsletter, November 14, 1984
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians
Queer Asian Pacific-Islander Alliance
1984-11-14
Email info@historyproject.org for information about rights, reproductions, etc.
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians (BAGMAL) Newsletter, November 1987
1987-11-01
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians (BAGMAL) Newsletter, October 1987
1987-10-01
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians (BAGMAL) Newsletter, September 14, 1984
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians
Queer Asian Pacific-Islander Alliance
1984-09-13
Email info@historyproject.org for information about rights, reproductions, etc.
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians (BAGMAL) Newsletter, September 1987
1987-09-01
Boston Asian Gay Men and Lesbians flyer
Boston Bisexual Women's Network members march in a parade
Boston Bisexual Women's Network
The Boston Bisexual Women’s Network is a feminist, not-for-profit collective organization whose purpose is to bring women together for support and validation. This photograph shows women in a parade carrying a banner which reads: "Bisexual Pride, Gay Liberation Is Our Liberation, Boston Bisexual Women's Network".
Susan Fleischmann
The History Project, Inc.
1989
Please credit Susan Fleischmann. Email info@historyproject.org for additional information about rights, reproductions, etc.
GCN.ORG.00105