The Stonewall Inn, (named after the
Confederate General 'Stonewall' Jackson), was a gay bar (said to be
sleazy and Mafia-run) at 51-53 Christopher Street just east of
Sheridan Square in New York's Greenwich Village. On the night of
27-28th. June, 1969, a police inspector and seven other officers from
the Public Morals Section of the First Division of the New York City
Police Department arrived shortly after midnight, served a warrant
charging that alcohol was being sold without a license, and announced
that employees would be arrested.
The patrons were ejected from the bar by the police while others
lingered outside to watch, and were joined by passersby. The arrival
of the paddy wagons changed the mood of the crowd from passivity to
defiance. The first vehicle left without incident apart from catcalls
from the crowd. The next individual to emerge from the bar was a
woman in male costume who put up a struggle which galvanized the
bystanders into action. The crowd erupted into throwing cobblestones
and bottles. Some officers took refuge in the bar while others turned
a fire hose on the crowd. Police reinforcements were called and in
time the streets were cleared. During the day the news spread, and
the following two nights saw further violent confrontations between
the police and gay people.
The event was important less for its intrinsic character than for the
significance subsequently bestowed on it. The Stonewall Rebellion was
a spontaneous act of resistance to the police harassment that had
been inflicted on the homosexual community since the inception of the
modern vice squad in metropolitan police forces. It sparked a new,
highly visible, mass phase of political organization for gay rights
that far surpassed, semi-clandestine homophile movement of the 1950s
and 1960s, exemplified by the Mattachine Society. The Mattachine
Society newsletter described the rebellion as 'the hairpin drop heard
round the world'. Gay movements expanded into the Gay Liberation
Front (GLF), Gay Activists Alliance, and many other groups.
The event has been commemorated by a parade held each year in New
York City on the last Sunday in June, following a tradition that
began with the first march on 29th. June, 1970, and by parallel
events throughout the United States.
Some sensibilities might be bruised if it were not mentioned that
27th. June, 1969 was the day of the funeral of Judy Garland (Frances
Gumm, 1922-69), American actor, singer, and gay icon. She had died on
22nd. June. This had cast a pall over the community and many gay bars
in Greenwich Village were draped in black as a sign of respect. Many
gay men had queued the previous day to see her lying in state at the
Frank E. Campbell funeral home.
The Stonewall drag queens were listed at number 44 in the top 500
lesbian and gay heroes in The Pink Paper, 26th. September, 1997,
issue 500, page 19. Judy Garland did not appear anywhere in The Pink
Paper's list.
In March 2000 the Stonewall Inn was declared a national historical
landmark, and one of the three percent of US landmarks deemed to be
of national importance. Andrew Dolkart, historian at Columbia
University, was quoted as saying 'It's a key site in 20th century
history'.
While the Stonewall Rebellion was a stepping stone to GLBT Pride and
Freedom this was only one event that took place in the struggle for
our freedom to be who we are. And as a group of Gays, Lesbians,
Bisexuals, Transgenders and Open Minded People we still have a long
road ahead of us, but with the actions taken by those at the
Stonewall Inn in 1969 they have set the freedoms we now tack for
granted.