The Stonewall Riots were the spark for the LGBTQ+ rights movement, affecting the social and political environments for people of the LGBTQ+ community. It took decades of organized struggle to get the political and social environment for queer people to where it is today. The watershed moment for that struggle was started in the early morning of June 28, 1969 The Stonewall Riots were an uprising against the prosecution of queer people. They started at around 1:20am on June 28, 1969 when police raided the popular gay bar the Stonewall Inn on Christopher street. They raided the bar under the pretense that the Stonewall was serving alcohol without a liquor license. Raids on gay bars were common in the early 1900s. According to the Stonewall Inn’s website “During a typical raid... the customers were lined up and their identification checked. Those without identification or dressed in full drag were arrested.” The raid on the Stonewall Inn happened in this fashion. The patrons that had been released formed a crowd, waiting for their friends to come out …show more content…
Protesters were smashing windows and throwing things. Writer Lucian Truscott IV said that the crowd was yelling things like “Gay power!” “I’m gay and proud!” as their slogans. The crowd grew as LGBTQ+ people from the other bars on Christopher street and in Greenwich village joined the protests. The police reacted with reinforcements and the Tactical Police Force. The streets were soon cleared of protesters. However the streets didn’t remain clear for long. The following night, the protesters returned. In contrast to the previous night's protests Saturday’s protests were not as chaotic and violent. In an article about the riots Truscott said that there were gay cheerleaders leading the crowd in gay power cheers "We are the Stonewall girls/ We wear our hair in curls/ We have no underwear/ We show our pubic hairs!" The protests continued for five days, they ended the evening of Wednesday July 2,
They took a two-week break from protesting, hoping that this would give city officials
Greensboro Sit-Ins Imagine America without equal rights. Where you were considered a less of a human just because of your race. This was how life was in the US during the 60’s. Because of this unfairness, African-Americans around the South started the civil rights movement. The Greensboro Sit-Ins, a part of the civil rights movement, helped to erase the segregation and discrimination in the South.
Thousands of servicemen joined the riots. Servicemen entered bars, theaters, dance halls, restaurants, and even private homes in search of victims. Toward the end of the rioting, the servicemen expanded their attacks to include all Mexican Americans, whether they wore zoot suits or not, and African Americans too (Escobar). More and more of these zoot-suiters were getting injured and arrested for being victims of the riots, though they were not the start of them. Several reports were being published stating that many Mexican Americans youths were requesting to be arrested and locked up in order to protect themselves from the servicemen in the streets.
The outcome of this protest did not come out as planed this protest stared off with thousands of student gathered around the school some were a little more outspoken and show their emotions through their actions. These actions lead to the next and students are creating bomb
In 1969, a police raid on a gay bar in New York City occurred. Instead
Then commenced the march, people left satisfied with the notion that we 're finally taking a stand for equal job opportunities and true American freedom. (Wukovits, 65-67) After watching the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on T.V in 1963 Dr. King turned to his wife and said, "This is what is going to happen to me also. I keep telling you, this is a sick nation. And I don 't think I can survive either",(De Angelis, 150) and sure enough, he was correct.
The Montgomery boycott lasted a full thirteen months, with many dedicated to ending segregation and civil rights. The article “Rosa Parks” Read it! goes in-depth to explain how the bus boycott started with a woman named Rosa Parks and the effects she had on civil rights for the African American community. After Rosa Parks made a simple, but powerful stand of refusing to give up her bus seat to a white man, people started non-violent protests to end unfair segregation. This boycott prompted African American leaders to take their case to the court system, filing a case against the ongoing violation of their constitutional rights.
The Civil Rights Movement of the 1950’s and 1960’s was a struggle for African Americans to obtain equal rights and be free of racial discrimination. The use of Jim Crow Laws allowed people, particularly in the South, to continue oppressing African Americans after the Civil War. Confrontational tactics such as protests and sit-ins were important in the Civil Rights Movement, however non-confrontational tactics such as litigation, civil disobedience and economic boycotts were most important as they brought about significant change in opposing segregation. Confrontation is defined as a hostile or argumentative situation between opposing parties.
Despite the beneficial projects Planned Parenthood has participated in, riots have broken out against the facility. According to The Daily Signal, “Students for Life of America organized ‘Women Betrayed’ rallies nationwide to protest taxpayer funding for the nation’s largest abortion provider” (Scanlon). The protests could eventually lead to a decrease in funding for Planned Parenthood. The riots do not only affect the business, they also affect the patients. On June 28, 2014, a six-hour, non-violent protest broke out in front of the Boston Planned Parenthood.
On the 28th of June, 1969, a police raid on the Stonewall inn, a mafia-owned gay bar in New York, became a turning point in the fight for LGBT rights when the bar’s patrons began violently protesting their mistreatment. While the police had a warrant to search the bar for the sale of alcohol without a liquor license, they were also motivated by morality laws which included many anti-gay restrictions. The Stonewall riots continued for several more nights, and gave rise to an extreme increase in the number of gay liberation organizations and gave the LGBT community a more powerful voice, with the protests coming to symbolize the beginning of the gay liberation movement. Homosexuality in the 1960s
Although this may have caused some havoc it was not meant to be out of control but to help change the views and show that homosexuals will not continue to be targeted for their sexual orientation. There is a point in time when a group can no longer take the constant criticism of others based off of their own lifestyle choices and decide to take action on their own, and this is exactly what the stonewall riot was about, if no one could help them then they would all have to come together to help
They started their journey on may 4rth 1961 and ended on may 24 1961. This protest was sparked and inspired by Rosa Parks and the bus boycott when the arrived in Jackson, Mississippi they get arrested. Greensboro sit-ins The Greensboro sit-ins were started by first a group of African Americans that were not allowed to sit at a lunch counter when they came in and sat at it and kept trying and trying to order food and they would move until the cops came and arrested them.
The members of the movement still remained subjects secondarily; they followed laws that they viewed as morally right, as proven by their use of nonviolence. Nonviolent protesting is all about refraining from fighting back and hurting attackers physically or verbally, damaging property, etc. " The hardest part to learn--to truly understand, deep in your heart--was how to find love for your attacker" (Lewis et al 1:82). Love was the focus of their movement, not violence. In other words, they did not kill, steal, assault, or anything else that is common sense for a man of
If they did come out there would be harsh consequences such as job loss or jail time. Carter does a great job of showing how gay people had to live in the shadows during the 1960s. Gay people did not have a bar, club, nor restaurant that would be accepting of them. Instead, if gay people wanted to go out and have a drink they would have to go to mafia ran bars and clubs. Within these clubs, the managers and owners were cruel to homosexuals even though the establishment invited them to their businesses.
All of these affairs had been key events that lead up to the explosion that was the Stonewall Riots of June 28, 1969. In Greenwich Village, police raided the Stonewall Inn in the early hours of the morning. They arrested 13 people, including employees and people violating the state’s gender-appropiate statute on clothing. Fed up with the discrimination and constantly being harassed by the police, patrons of the Stonewall Inn and neighborhood residents, including Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera, the founders of Sweet Transvestite Action Revolutionaries, became quickly agitated after being aggressively manhandled by the police and within a few minute, it became a full on riot, lasting five days. In 1973, the American Psychiatric Association removed homosexuality from the list of mental disorders.