This Week in Queer History
On June 25, 1972, a schoolteacher from Queens named Jeanne Manford grabbed a piece of orange posterboard, wrote in marker that parents of gay children should unite in support of their kids, and stepped into the Christopher Street Liberation Day March. She'd never made a protest sign before - you can tell by the lowercase letters in the middle of the message. She'd never crossed the street against the light. And when she walked out into that crowd, strangers ran into the street weeping, begging her to talk to their parents. This episode is a celebration of that day and the movement it became. To understand why that handmade sign broke everyone open, you have to understand the world it appeared in. Gay People at Columbia University. The Gay Activists Alliance. The New York Hilton Inner Circle dinner, where Morty Manford was brutally beaten by a firefighter while police stood and watched. Jeanne's response was to write a letter to the New York Post: I have a homosexual son and I love him. Published April 29, 1972. A public school teacher in Queens, putting her name and career on the line in 1972. And then marching. On March 11, 1973, Jeanne held the first PFLAG meeting at Metropolitan-Duane United Methodist Church in Greenwich Village. About twenty people showed up. Those early meetings were described as frank and raw and therapeutic - parents struggling with the gap between who they thought their child was and who their child actually is. From those twenty people grew an organization with over 360 chapters and more than 550,000 members and supporters today. Research from the Family Acceptance Project shows that LGBTQ+ youth with accepting families are eight times less likely to attempt suicide. That is what Jeanne Manford built. This episode also gets deeply personal - about what it means to come out to parents who love you, about how a parent's greatest growth is learning to let their child be who they already are, and about the grandmothers who love you completely even when they have to spell out every syllable of the word. In 2026, PFLAG faces its most organized opposition since the mid-1990s. But the lesson of Jeanne Manford is simple and undefeatable: you step off the curb, you hold your sign, and you march for the ones you love. Listen to more episodes: https://thisweekinqueerhistory.com [https://thisweekinqueerhistory.com] Stay in touch: https://thisweekinqueerhistory.com/subscribe [https://thisweekinqueerhistory.com/subscribe] Website: https://thisweekinqueerhistory.com [https://thisweekinqueerhistory.com] Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2609297/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2609297/support]
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