3
August

This Day in Queer History

7 events documented

1973
Event

On this day, the first issue of Gay Tide was published by GATE in Vancouver, adding another voice to the growing chorus of queer media across Canada.

1982
Activist

Today in queer history, Nyla Rose was born. She became the first openly transgender wrestler to sign with a major American promotion and the first to win a major championship title.

1988
Event

On this day, after ignoring six years of the AIDS epidemic, President Reagan reluctantly banned workplace discrimination based on HIV status, following his own commission's recommendation.

2003
Event

On this day in 2003, the Episcopal Church approved Rev. Gene Robinson as its first openly gay bishop by a 2-1 vote, breaking new ground for LGBTQ+ inclusion in faith leadership.

2007
Event

On this day in 2007, the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a ruling striking down Oklahoma's refusal to recognize adoptions by same-sex couples, affirming that queer families deserve equal legal recognition.

2011
Event

On this day, Rudolf Brazda died at 98. The last known gay Holocaust survivor, he spent nearly three years in Buchenwald branded with the pink triangle the Nazis used to mark gay men.

2017
Event

On this day in 2017, David Glawe was confirmed as Under Secretary for Intelligence at DHS, becoming the highest-ranking openly gay official in U.S. history. He introduced his husband and children during his Senate hearing.

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