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kyLGBT.org - Kentucky gay rights movement (and Kentucky Equality Federation) timeline; Kentucky Gay History.
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02/25/2009: Kentucky Equality Federation
assists in the preparation of Kentuckians Value Fairness III. Kentucky
Equality Federation brings the Progressive Democrats of America, Libertarian
Party of Kentucky, and various 'Young County Democrat' organizations around the
Commonwealth to the annual event. (video)
01/28/2009: Kentucky Equality Federation launches a new
outreach program. (more)
12/12/2008: Already a member of the International Lesbian and Gay Association, Kentucky
Equality Federation, and Marriage Equality KentuckyTM join Marriage Equality
USA.
08/16/2008: Marriage Equality
Kentucky is launched as a grassroots movement to bring general neutral marriage
equality to the Commonwealth of Kentucky. For additional information, visit marriageequalityky.org.
06/08/2008: Organization
of American States recognizes LGBT people. (more)
06/02/2008:
Kentucky Equality Federation praises Governor Beshear's new
Executive Order protecting LGBT people from discrimination in Kentucky
Government. (more)
05/06/2008: Kentucky Equality
Federation donates $1,500.00 to pay remaining bills for 2008's Come Together
Kentucky hosted by Northern Kentucky University. (more)
03/18/2008: Officers from Kentucky
Equality meet with Kentucky House Leadership to kill Senate Bill 112 (House Bill
118), a law passed by the Senate that would redefine domestic-partner to
exclude same-sex couples. The bill later dies in a House
Committee.
01/05/2008: Kentucky
Equality and Bluegrass Fairness of Central Kentucky begin affiliation and form a
strategic partnership.
12/12/2007: Kentucky Equality Federation condems legislation to ban
same-sex domestic-partner benefits at Kentucky universities. (more)
11/07/2007: Kentucky Equality
Federation begins boycott of Wal-Mart. (more)
03/27/2007: Kentucky Equality Federation holds a reception
for the 2007 Soulforce Equality Ride. (more)
03/08/2007: Kentucky Equality Federation wins the first (2007) Social Justice
Impact Award, $10,000.00 and promotional support from MySpace. (more)
02/22/2007: Hundreds stormed the commonwealth's Capitol
on February 22, 2007 to support domestic-partner benefits for heterosexual and
homosexual couples. (more)
12/22/2006: Anti-gay Christians miss message; anti-gay protests in
Richmond, KY. (more)
10/25/2006: Representative Fischer's (R) statement upsets gays; Kentucky
Equality Federation members protest. (more)
09/27/2006: Northern Kentucky
University responds to Kentucky Equality Federation's concerns regarding a hate
crime/act of intolerance involving a gay student. (more)
2006: A gay male couple in
Louisville is stabbed to death. Charles Poynter, 43, died of multiple stab
wounds, and his house was set on fire; his partner, Blaine Thackery, was also
killed.
09/12/2006: Police in Covington believe two apparent
homophobic attacks - one in which a man was stabbed - are not related. The
victim in the stabbing was attacked following an encounter in a local
restaurant. Police say that he was in the bar of La Tradicion restaurant
when a man approached him and asked "if he was really a female." The victim said
he was not and walked away. According to the police report, "Suspect then
approached victim from rear, stabbing him twice. Suspect stated to victim,
'I got you.'"
09/05/2006: Kentucky
Equality Federation expands community services to include reporting hate crimes,
discrimination, and school bullying; Federation now acts as a buffer between the
victim and local officials, ensuring immediate action is taken to correct the
situation. You can now complete a report online and submit it to Kentucky
Equality Federation. We will do everything possible and necessary to protect
your privacy, and we will ensure your constitutional freedoms, rights, and
liberties are protected.
08/22/2006: Kentucky Equality Federation demands an
immediate apology and investigation from Steak n' Shake after the Manager on
Duty at a location in Louisville, KY asks the "fags" to leave.
08/18/2006: Kentucky Equality Federation is accepted as a member
of the International Lesbian and Gay Association.
07/21/2006: Boone County High School in Northern Kentucky
ended months of stonewalling and avoided a federal lawsuit by finally approving
the formation of its first Gay-Straight Alliance. After working with the school
for months, Kentucky Equality Federation notified the Board of Education of its
intention to sue to school Board if it failed to approve the club immediately.
(more)
06/20/2006: Kentucky
Equality Federation condemns the Pentagon's "Instruction Document" which lists
homosexuality as a "mental defeat" along with mental retardation, impulse
control disorders and personality disorders. The document is later changed
because of enormous national pressure.
05/06/2006: Kentucky Equality
Federation makes headlines across the commonwealth as its members assemble near
the Governor's Mansion to protest funding to the University of the Cumberlands
and other policies of the Fletcher Administration during the Governor's Annual
Derby Breakfast Celebration.
03/18/2006: Members of
Kentucky Equality Federation lobby (for the first time) at the Kentucky Capital
to prevent a bill to remove protections provided by the cities of Covington,
Lexington, and Louisville against discrimination based on sexual orientation
becoming law; the legislation had been introduced to the House of
Representatives in January.
12/06/2005: Members of
Kentucky Equality Federation thank Wells Fargo Bank, and Ford Motor Co. for not
caving to pressure from anti-gay groups for their gay-friendly
policies.
2005: Timothy Blair, 19,
was gunned down as he walked near
28th and Magazine in Louisville, KY. Timothy was a
gay man who did drag; the night he was killed he was in women's
clothing.
2005:
Joshua Cottrell, 23, is found guilty of
manslaughter after he admitted
beating and strangling to death a gay man and then stuffing his body into a
suitcase and dumping it in a lake. Throughout the trial Cottrell's defense
painted the accused as being a victim who killed Richie Phillips, 36, in
Cottrell's Elizabethtown motel room after Phillips made an unwanted sexual
advance on him.
During the trial Cottrell's adoptive aunt, Wendy Cottrell McAnly testified that Cottrell confessed to her that he had planned Phillips' murder. The suitcase containing Phillips' was found floating on Rough River Lake last June by two fishermen.
The Commonwealth's Attorneys Office had sought a murder conviction which would carry the death penalty under Kentucky law. The jury gave Cottrell the lightest verdict it could however by using the "gay panic defense."
2004:
Matthew Ashcraft, 19, was attacked for coming to
the defense of a gay man who was being beaten outside a Newport bar.
Ashcraft, who is not gay, was with two gay friends on their way to Woolly's, an
LGBT friendly bar. As they approached the club they saw Leon Hughes being
harassed outside. When Ashcraft intervened, the man who was assaulting
Hughes left, then returned with a baseball bat and beat Ashcraft unconscious
prosecutors said.
1999:
Private First Class Barry Winchell is beaten to death with a baseball bat at
Fort Campbell, KY as he slept for dating a transgender performer. Winchell died
of massive internal injuries. One of his attackers was released from prison in
August 2006 to a halfway house, and released from all custody on October 12,
2006. *This story was the subject of Showtime movie "Soldier's
Girl."
Some of the following historical
events have been copied from Jeff Jones. We encourage you to visit Jeff's site! Thank you Jeff,
for all the hard work you did!
1994: Responding to a resolution by the University of Kentucky Student Government Association, the UK Board of Trustees make two actions: a) they vote to explicitly prohibit discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation in admissions and financial aid, and b) pass a resolution that UK should not discriminate in any of its policies based on sexual orientation.
09/24/1992: Kentucky
Supreme Court overturns the commonwealth's same-sex only, consensual sodomy law
in a 5-4 decision in a ruling on Wasson v. the Commonwealth of Kentucky. The justices in the
majority subsequently receive death threats.
1990: The Letter, a
Louisville-based gay newspaper, begins publication.
1990: The Kentucky HIV Care Coordinator Program is established.
1986: Jeffrey Wasson arrested on 4th degree (consensual) sodomy
outside of The Bar Complex after being entrapped by an undercover policeman who
engaged him in conversation. The arrest following this sting operation
eventually leads to Wasson challenging the law in Wasson v. the Commonwealth of Kentucky.
1986: Meeting at
The Cafe
LMNOP, a gay bar and drag theater on Main St., Liz Turpin
recruits lesbian female-to-male drag performer Karen Brown to be her girlfriend
and to join Turpin in murdering her husband. The two hire a man who kills the
husband. All three are arrested and found guilty after a sensational courtroom
trial (read Rena Vicini's true murder novel "Fatal Seductions").
1986: GALUS, a gay student group, is active at UK as the first officially recognized gay student group. GALUS members successfully lobby UK to prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation in grading (only area covered).
1982: Having learned of the International Imperial Court System, an
international charity organization founded by gay pioneer Jose
Sarria that primarily relies on drag shows to raise funds for other
charities, while living in Alaska, native Lexingtonians Greg Butler and Marlon
Austin (aka Blanche Pinke) returned to Lexington and found the Royal Sovereign
Imperial Court of the Bluegrass Empire (later R.S. Imperial Court of all
Kentucky). The Kentucky court becomes the first east of the Mississippi River.
08/08/1978: The International Lesbian
and Gay Association (ILGA) was founded during the conference of the Campaign for
Homosexual Equality in Coventry, England, at a meeting attended by 30 men
representing 17 organizations from 14 countries.
ILGA was instrumental in getting the United Nations World Health
Organization to drop homosexuality from its list of mental
illnesses.
Today, the
ILGA is an international organization bringing together more than 400 lesbian
and gay groups from around the world. It continues to be active in campaigning
for gay rights on the international human rights and civil rights scene and
regularly petitions the United Nations and governments. ILGA is represented in
around 90 countries across the world.
1971: Gay Liberation Front (GLF) formed at the University of Kentucky throught the Open University Program. Bruce Kraus is GLF's first president. GLF and subsequent groups (until the 1980s) are not recognized officially by the University of Kentucky as student groups. When GLF goes to court to seek official recognition as a student organization from UK, GLF loses the case.
1880: The U.S. Census Bureau includes listings for prison inmates and lists two individuals imprisoned in Kentucky for "crimes against nature." Blacks disproportionately are imprisoned for such offenses than whites in 1880 probably as a mechanism for punishing African-Americans who oppose racial inequalities or who lack the status to fend off homosexual accusations.
1863: The Louisville Daily Democrat reports the suicide of a Civil War soldier who was a woman passing as a man.
Last Updated (2009-06-04 02:04:26)
