Misplaced Pages

Fred Sargeant

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Lilipo25 (talk | contribs) at 09:45, 12 May 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Revision as of 09:45, 12 May 2020 by Lilipo25 (talk | contribs)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Fred Sargeant (b. 1948) is an American gay rights activist. He is a veteran of the 1969 Stonewall riots and was a co-organizer of the first Gay Pride march and celebration.

Early activism

Sargeant grew up in Connecticut and moved to New York City at age nineteen, There, he met and began dating Craig Rodwell, who had recently opened what was then the country's only gay bookstore, the Oscar Wilde Memorial Bookshop in Greenwich Village. The store was a gathering place for young gay activists, and soon Sargeant was running it along with Rodwell and had become an active member of the Homophile Youth Movement which operated out of it.

Stonewall riots

Main article: Stonewall riots

After midnight on June 28, 1969, Sargeant and Rodwell were returning from dinner at a friend's home and passed the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar and club owned by a member of the Genovese crime family. They saw a crowd of about 75 people gathered outside the Inn and a police car in front, and were told the club had been raided. As police emerged from inside the Stonewall leading a customer, someone began throwing coins at the officers and others joined in, forcing the police to retreat back into the building and call for reinforcements.

Get The Mafia and The Cops Out of Gay Bars

At dawn, Sargeant and Rodwell went back to their apartment and began putting together the first of many leaflets calling for the gay community to seize the moment and stand up to the corrupt police and the mafia who controlled their neighborhoods. They distributed about 5,000 copies around the city the next day, encouraging people to return to the Stonewall that night, where they once again clashed with police.

The headline on that first leaflet read "Get the Mafia and the Cops Out of Gay Bars" and it began: "The nights of Friday, June 27, 1969 and Saturday, June 28, 1969, will go down in history as the first time that thousands of homosexual men and women went out into the streets to protest the intolerable situation which has existed in New York City for many years."

Gay pride

As a member of the Mattachine Society, Rodwell had participated in an annual July 4th 'picket protest' for gay rights at Independence Hall in Philadelphia. In an effort to make gay integration into society and the workforce seem non-threatening, Mattachine's Frank Kameny insisted on conservative dress and behavior at the protests: women were required to wear dresses and men ties, and no displays of affection were allowed between participants. Rodwell and other young activists balked at these restrictions at the annual protest that was held only a week after the Stonewall riots began. When the Mattachine Society held a special meeting in the days following the Stonewall riots, Martha Shelley of the lesbian civil rights group Daughters of Bilitis raised her hand and suggested a protest march be planned in commemoration of the uprising. The attendees voted in favor.

Five months after the Stonewall riots, in the autumn of 1969, the Eastern Regional Conference of Homophile Organizations (ERCHO) convened in Philadelphia. At the conference, Ellen Broidy and Linda Rhodes of the lesbian activist group Lavender Menace joined Rodwell and Sargeant in proposing a resolution for a NYC march to commemorate the anniversary of Stonewall, and a call for other cities around the country to hold parallel events on the same day. Once the resolution was approved, feminist and LGB activist Brenda Howard of the Gay Liberation Front became involved in coordinating the event and suggested that it be expanded to a week-long celebration.

Most of the preparation work was done by Sargeant, GLF members Michael Brown and Marty Nixon and Mattachine Society member Foster Gunnison Jr., who acted as treasurer. They utilized the bookshop's mailing list to gather support and participants for the march and negotiated the details with over a dozen different gay advocacy groups including Lavender Menace and the Gay Activists Alliance.

On the first anniversary of the Stonewall uprising, the Christopher Street Liberation Day March, now considered the first NYC Pride March, began with a few hundred participants in front of the Stonewall Inn. By the time it reached Sheep's Meadow in Central Park 50 blocks later, the marchers numbered in the thousands.

Sargeant marched at the front of the parade and as the only person there with a bullhorn, led the official chant: "Say it loud, gay is proud". He wrote in an article for the Village Voice in 2010:

"At one point, I climbed onto the base of a light pole and looked back. I was astonished; we stretched out as far as I could see, thousands of us. There were no floats, no music, no boys in briefs. The cops turned their backs on us to convey their disdain, but the masses of people kept carrying signs and banners, chanting and waving to surprised onlookers."

Personal life

In 1971, Sargeant left New York and returned to Connecticut, where several years later, he decided to become a police officer: "I wanted to see if I could make a difference, and having seen the situation at Stonewall and how the NYPD handled that I thought I could do it differently. Stonewall wasn't the only riot I saw. I'd been caught up in riots in the Village before and watched what the police did." He went on to attain the rank of lieutenant with the Stamford Police Department before retiring.

Sargeant appeared in the 2011 documentary film Stonewall Uprising.

In 2014, Sargeant was honored as one of the founders of Gay Pride at the 44th annual New York City Pride March, where he once again marched at the front of the parade with a bullhorn.

He resides in Vermont with his husband, whom he married in 2010.

References

  1. ^ Fitzsimons 2019
  2. Pitman 2019, p. vii
  3. ^ PBS 2010
  4. Pitman 2019, p. 105
  5. ^ Fitzsimons 2018
  6. ^ Holland 2017
  7. Carter 2005, p. 247
  8. Pitman 2019, p. 148
  9. Sargeant 2010
  10. Sargeant 2009
  11. Sanders 2011
  12. ^ Lindholm 2014

Sources


This sandbox is in the article namespace. Either move this page into your userspace, or remove the {{User sandbox}} template.