Tag Archives: Pride Week

Pride Week is here – We’re making history!

Pride 2014 is upon us, and the Calgary Gay History Project is busy.  We hope you can join us for our NEW downtown walk on Wednesday, August 27th.  Check out Ted Henley’s interview with me on City TV’s Breakfast Television as a preview of the some of the stops.

Alyssa Quirico wrote this week’s FFWD cover story, Pride in a conservative culture, featuring highlights from an interview she did with the history project.

Look for us at various Pride events throughout the week, culminating at our Festival Information Booth on Parade Day, August 31st.  Come by and ask us questions, or share your story about Calgary’s gay history.  You can even buy a t-shirt in support of the project.

Also, watch next week for the launch of the Writing Calgary Gay History Kickstarter Campaign (we are writing the book)!  You will be able to pre-purchase it while at the same time commissioning the publication.

Happy Pride!

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Big August for the Calgary Gay History Project

Thanks to everyone who came out for the gay history walk last Saturday for Historic Calgary Week (which is still happening throughout this weekend)!  Our next walk, in partnership with Calgary Outlink, will happen during Pride Week, on Wednesday, August 27th, at 7 PM starting at the Memorial Park Library.  This is a new walk going to sites downtown instead of last year’s Beltline tour.  A reception will follow at the Community Wise Resource Centre (223 12 Ave SW) with non-alcoholic drinks and refreshments for purchase.

Also, we would like to give a shout out to Terry MacKenzie and the Bankview Community Association for their Picnic 91 – A Queer Takeover Picnic of Buckmaster Park on Thursday, August 28th, marking the City’s first gay pride proclamation in 1991.

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Watch for new social media developments with the Calgary Queer History project as well.  We will be adding Twitter and renovating the website in August as the project seeks to branch out past the 50s and 60s.

We are also putting out a call for volunteers.  The project to date has been lucky to work with, Del, Tereasa, Nevena, Jonathan and Leslie.  Now that research lead, Kevin Allen, has left his job to pursue the project full time, we can take on more project volunteers.  Specifically, we will be needing help during Pride Week.  If you have some time and are interested please contact us at calgarygayhistory@gmail.com.

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Worker’s Pride: Labour Unions and our History

The Alberta Federation of Labour (AFL) was one of the supporters of Calgary’s 2013 Pride Parade.  A volunteer association of unions and employee organizations, the AFL also has a Pride and Solidarity Standing Committee, “…to encourage active involvement of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender persons in union activities and other activities affecting them, to promote, audit and organize educational programs concerning gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender persons in the workplace…” among other elements.  This has not always been the case.  The bond between labour and LGBTQ people has developed slowly over the last 30 years and the rise of public service associations.

Canadian WORKERUnions began to grow in importance in the 1960s with massive strikes that lead to long term change, such as the Federal Public Service Staff Relations Act, 1967, which gave public servants collective bargaining rights.  The push for ongoing dialogue between union and employer served as examples to gay and lesbian activists on how to get organized, and created the avenues for their own dialogue in the work environment.  As well, they saw the workers as member of the locals as needing to have their rights protected. According to historians Gary Kinsman, the rise of the Canadian Union of Public Employees and the formation of the Public Service Alliance of Canada in 1966, began to make it more difficult for RCMP and employers to ask about a person’s sexuality. Kinsman states that:

“Because one of the things the new unions challenged was the sort of paramilitary or quasi-military hierarchy that was in the public service, and the various forms of discipline that took place.  And that obviously opened up some more space for lesbians and gays who were employed in the public service to begin to organize and, eventually, begin to speak out.”

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Sources and Further Reading

Canadian Labour – http://www.canadianlabour.ca/human-rights-equality/pride

Troster, Ariel. “The Canadian War on Queer Workers”, Our Times, Vol 29 Issue 3 June-July 2010. http://ourtimes.ca/Features/article_127.php

Highlights in Canadian Labour History – http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/highlights-in-canadian-labour-history-1.850282

Tom Warner. Never Going Back, a history of queer activism in Canada. University of Toronto Press, 2002.

Gary Kinsman and Patrizia Gentile. The Canadian War on Queers: National Security as Sexual Regulation. UBC Press, 2010.