Queen Elizabeth's is expected to wed the first same-sex royal weddg this summer — but he is far om the first gay Brish royal, acrdg to historians.
Contents:
- THE TE STORY OF ‘A VERY ENGLISH SNDAL’ AND THE TRIALS OF A CLOSETED GAY POLICIAN
- THE WILBLOOD SNDAL: THE TRIAL THAT ROCKED 1950S BRA – AND CHANGED GAY RIGHTS
- THE 200-YEAR-OLD DIARY THAT'S REWRG GAY HISTORY
- RISHI SUNAK APOLOGIS TO LGBT VETERANS FOR PAST ARMED FORC GAY BAN
- FOR CENTURI, BLACKMAIL WAS A TOOL USED TO INTIMIDATE GAY MEN
- FROM THE ARCHIVE, 24 JANUARY 1976: GUARDSMEN GAY MAGAZE RECEIVE MARCHG ORRS
- HUGH GRANT HAS A GAY AFFAIR WH BEN WHISHAW A VERY ENGLISH SNDAL TRAILER
- ‘THE KG AND HIS HBAND’: THE GAY HISTORY OF BRISH ROYALS
- HOW THE ESTABLISHMENT VERED UP GAY AFFAIR BETWEEN GANGSTER RONNIE KRAY AND TORY PEER
THE TE STORY OF ‘A VERY ENGLISH SNDAL’ AND THE TRIALS OF A CLOSETED GAY POLICIAN
It was the trial that had everythg: aristocrats, airmen, entrapment and immuny. But one gay man the dock refed to go quietly. Adam Mars-Jon on how the urage of Peter Wilblood paved the way to a more tolerant Bra * british gay scandal *
To be gay Bra durg that era meant puttg onelf nstant danger of arrt.
“It was a very opprsive climate right up to and cludg the Margaret Thatcher years, ” says polil scientist David Raysi, the thor of On the Frge: Gays and Lbians Polics. “In the 1970s and 80s, the overwhelmg majory Bra thought homosexual activy was morally wrong.
THE WILBLOOD SNDAL: THE TRIAL THAT ROCKED 1950S BRA – AND CHANGED GAY RIGHTS
A Yorkshire farmer's journal om 1810 reveals surprisgly morn views on beg gay. * british gay scandal *
Like many untri, Bra had a long history of anti-gay discrimatn.
Even then, was followed by dranian measur to prevent gay relatnships, cludg the Crimal Law Amendment Act of 1885, which ma “gross cency” between men—a purposely vague term—a crimal act.
THE 200-YEAR-OLD DIARY THAT'S REWRG GAY HISTORY
A Very English Sndal: Wh Hugh Grant, Ben Whishaw, Alex Jenngs, Patricia Hodge. Brish Liberal Party lear Jeremy Thorpe is acced of nspiracy to murr his gay ex-lover and forced to stand trial 1979." data-id="ma * british gay scandal *
The panic over homosexualy ntued after World War II, wr historian Michael Bloch Closet Queens: Some 20th Century Brish Policians: “A fiercely homophobic Home Secretary, Sir David Maxwell Fyfe, aid by an equally puranil Director of Public Prosecutns, Sir Theobold Matthew, was termed to ‘rid England of this plague. That report remend public statut should avoid legislatg moraly, and that the ernment should remove nsensual homosexual liaisons om crimal law. The 1967 Sexual Offens Act crimalized homosexual acts between nsentg adults private, though didn’t remove the stigma attendant on such acts.
In some ways, gay dividuals were jt as vulnerable as before. “The police were still entirely willg to heavily police those venu where was thought that homosexual activy occurred. That’s not to say all policians fought actively agast gay rights.
But the two domant parti of the era, the Labour and Conservative parti, were nowhere near as terted aligng themselv wh the gay rights movement. “Labour as a whole was very unfortable associatg self wh what ntued to terpret as a bourgeois and dangero issue, ” wr historian Lucy Robson Gay Men and the Left Post-War Bra.
RISHI SUNAK APOLOGIS TO LGBT VETERANS FOR PAST ARMED FORC GAY BAN
Those class tensns were a major ponent of the homosexualy issue Bra.
” In one episo, Lord Grantham exc the homosexual behavr of his footman, Thomas, sayg such cints happened regular when Lord Grantham attend Eton, a private school.
Regardls of how historilly accurate the earl’s reactn to his servant’s behavr was, is te that gay experimentatn flourished upper-class, sex-segregated is like boardg school, the ary, and the clergy. His exposure slowed the progrs of the LGBTQ movement; wasn’t until 1984 that Brish polician Chris Smh beme the first to e out as gay. Gay Rights,.
FOR CENTURI, BLACKMAIL WAS A TOOL USED TO INTIMIDATE GAY MEN
) The tentn may have been to unrle that social privilege offered no protectn, or to rerce the myth that homosexualy is herently an aristocratic perversn or bars … Daniel Mays as Wilblood Agast the Law, the BBC’s adaptatn of the mpaigner’s memoir.
Photograph: Dean Rogers/BBCWilblood his book propos that the prosecutn of proment homosexuals was part of an agenda, strongly urged by the Uned Stat, to weed such people out om important ernment jobs. In Ameri, McCarthy’s red sre had been acpanied by a “lavenr” one, wh mass firgs of gay employe om the state partment. Lurkg somewhere the background are the figur of the spi Burgs and Maclean, whose betrayals ma social privilege, homosexualy and treason seem a mutually rercg try.
FROM THE ARCHIVE, 24 JANUARY 1976: GUARDSMEN GAY MAGAZE RECEIVE MARCHG ORRS
It was put to Wilblood durg his trial that was a “feature” of gay men to seek “love associat” different walks of life om their own, and that McNally was fely his social ferr.
Dishont police alg wh gay men was a matter of urse on the streets of London, and entrapment a nstant risk for the unwary. The small group of people, maly women, who surround the r (an old Rolls-Royce) takg the new nvicts away were nveyg msag of support not nmnatn – sayg “keep sg”, givg the thumbs-up and existence of public support for gay people was a new element of the Wilblood se, and featur his book even before the text begs, wh the ditn ( pals to make sure no one missed ) “TO MY MOTHER AND FATHER”.
HUGH GRANT HAS A GAY AFFAIR WH BEN WHISHAW A VERY ENGLISH SNDAL TRAILER
It’s not that homosexuals were always disowned by their fai – support was always a possibily.
Agast the Law agated for civil rights for homosexuals, but the book is also an attack on ndns the prison system, and after his release Wilblood volved himself the procs of rehabilatg crimals, tryg to break the pattern of their reoffendg and returng to prison. He unrstood that the privileged new ia of gay people not beg a separate speci brought obligatns along wh those days hardback and paperback publitn were not smoothly -ordated, to the pot where they unt almost as separate events.
It was durg Wilblood’s prison term that the Woolfenn mtee was set up to vtigate the state of the law as regard homosexualy and prostutn, and to make remendatns for reform if need be.
‘THE KG AND HIS HBAND’: THE GAY HISTORY OF BRISH ROYALS
Pamela Hansford Johnson, for stance, her book On Iniquy, subtled “some personal reflectns arisg out of the Moors Murrs trial” and published the year that homosexuals fally received some civil regnn (1967), rells the “ltle storm” she had raised, not long before, “by suggtg, a letter to the Guardian, that was not sirable for Krafft-Ebg [whose Psychopathia Sexualis was tend as a ser study] to be available relatively cheap paperback edn on the bookstalls of English railway statns.
Naturally enough Wilblood wanted his book wily and cheaply available, sce one of the pots he ma , by breakg down crimal nvictns by social tegory, was that homosexualy cut across class l. The book scrib a variety of gay liv, profg not only om Wilblood’s journalistic skills but his new stat. The effect, to be po-faced about , is to stabilise the normaly of straight behavur, to the benef of gay prtige, but his rmant Pam is a wonrful character her own right.
A Way of Life also ntas a brief passage, paraphrasg someone else’s experience, which Wilblood allows himself to channel homosexual sire wh a power startlg for the perd: “Gordon had never looked at a man’s body this way before; he saw for the first time as somethg to sire and fear, an stment of tenrns and annihilatn whose purpos he uld not know. ” But no gay men evince, though a wrer of the perd like Ang Wilson uld troduce homosexual characters and them to his novels whout the world endg. Image ptn, Claire Pickerg Wakefield library imag the diary wrer speakg a Yorkshire accentA diary wrten by a Yorkshire farmer more than 200 years ago is beg hailed as providg remarkable evince of tolerance towards homosexualy Bra much earlier than prevly imaged.
HOW THE ESTABLISHMENT VERED UP GAY AFFAIR BETWEEN GANGSTER RONNIE KRAY AND TORY PEER
Historians om Oxford Universy have been taken aback to disver that Matthew Tomlson's diary om 1810 ntas such open-md views about same-sex attractn beg a "natural" human diary challeng prenceptns about what "ordary people" thought about homosexualy - showg there was a bate about whether someone really should be discrimated agast for their sexualy. "In this excg new disvery, we see a Yorkshire farmer argug that homosexualy is nate and somethg that shouldn't be punished by ath, " says Oxford rearcher Eamonn O' ptn, The diari were handwrten by Tomlson the farmhoe where he lived and workedThe historian had been examg Tomlson's handwrten diari, which have been stored Wakefield Library sce the thoands of pag of the private journals have never been transcribed and prevly ed by rearchers terted Tomlson's eye-wns acunts of electns Yorkshire and the Ludd smashg up O'Keeffe me across what seemed, for the era of Gee III, to be a rather startlg set of arguments about same-sex relatnships.