Tag Archives: gay

Butch Bucks YYC

It has been a busy couple of weeks for the Calgary Gay History Project.  It seems like we’ve met with a tonne of people in Calgary recently, and on the West Coast this week.  Thanks to: Gene, Joey, Tereasa, Lisa, Aaron, Lara, James, Melody, Mark, Geordie, Nigel, Jim and Ayanna for all of the feedback, memories, stories and positive regard.

Butch Bucks

However, I want to make a couple of special mentions.  The Friday before last, Terry MacKenzie donated 4 bags of books to the history project – early gay readers, handbooks, social studies, and manifestos that will assist us as researchers in putting our local findings into a cultural context.  Perhaps the most notable contribution though are the Butch Bucks that Terry uncovered.  Sourced and retained from some fun event in Calgary in 1978 (Terry thinks the Parkside Continental perhaps), this alternative currency predates Calgary Dollars significantly!  If reading this you remember more about Butch Bucks and their origins, please contact us at the project, to fill in the details.

This week I was twice at the BC Gay and Lesbian Archives to meet with archivist and historian Ron Dutton, who has been working on the project for 39 years!  The archives, containing 750,000 items are amazingly in his home, but he maintains the collection as a publicly accessible archive.  Ron is passionate about our community’s history and a real inspiration for the much younger Calgary Gay History Project.  To get a sense of Ron and his mission check out this Vancouver Courier produced video about the archives.

 

Thank you Ron.  Thank you Terry.

{KA}

 

2014 in review & Edmonton Queer History Project

Happy New Year!  The WordPress.com stats helper generated a 2014 annual report for the Calgary Gay History Project website.  This was a record year for us.

One excerpt:

The concert hall at the Sydney Opera House holds 2,700 people. This blog was viewed about 13,000 times in 2014. If it were a concert at Sydney Opera House, it would take about 5 sold-out performances for that many people to see it.

Click here to see the complete report.

Also I would like to warmly thank the Alberta Historical Resources Foundation.  I received a letter on January 2nd with the good news of a research grant that will support the book project as well as travel to Victoria, Vancouver and Saskatoon to visit their queer archives.

Finally, I would like to give a shout out to our colleagues to the North who are working on the Edmonton Queer History Project, and an exciting initiative this month to harvest their stories and archival materials.

{KA}

Calgary Gay History Project for 15 Year Olds

Earlier this year we were contacted by textbook publisher Nelson Education Ltd. They were working on a Grade 10 history publication, History Uncovered.  The textbook, designed for the Ontario public school curriculum wanted to cite our article   “Invisible: Queer Immigrants in the 1940s and 1950s” written by Calgary Gay History Project researcher Tereasa Maillie.

We said, “yes please!”

History Uncovered

A few weeks ago our copies of the textbooks came in the mail, and we were delighted to learn there was a presence with regard to gay rights throughout the publication.  History Uncovered reports on Everett Klippert and the decriminalization of homosexuality in 1969, same-sex marriage in 2005, as well as and the Delwin Vriend, Supreme Court verdict in 1998, which ‘read in’ sexual orientation as a protected ground in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

I recall a much different Grade 10 Social Studies class in 1985; we had no presence in the textbooks to speak of!  How thrilling to see our project become part of school curriculum.

On the subject of gratitude, the Calgary Gay History Project wishes all of our readers and supporters happy holidays.  We look forward to connecting with you again in 2015!