In the LGBT+ community, Stonewall is often seen as the turning point in the fight for our rights but there was another riot, on the other coast, about three years earlier. It was known as the Compton's Cafeteria Riot and it occurred in the summer of 1966 in the Tenderloin district of San Francisco. George Compton owned several cafeterias in San Francisco from the 40s through the 70s, but it was the Compton’s in the Tenderloin where many transgendered people would gather. In those days—the 40s, 50s, and 60s—transgendered people were unwelcome in gay bars, so they began to meet at other places throughout the city and since Compton’s was open 24-hours, it made the perfect meeting spot. At that time, transgendered people were commonly referred to by themselves, other gays, and non-gays as Hair Fairies, and because cross-dressing was illegal at the time, police could use the mere presence of transgender people in a bar as a pretext for making a raid and closing the bar down. However, like Stonewall, this hot summer night in 1966 would prove to be the straw that broke the camel's back. That night, police were called to Compton’s because, allegedly, a group of transgendered people were being especially boisterous. The management felt they needed to go and called the police. One officer, accustomed to manhandling transgendered people, attempted to arrest a transwoman and she was not having it; she threw her coffee in the officer's face and it was on. Dishes and food were thrown; furniture was upended. The large plate glass window that fronted Taylor Street was shattered. As police called for reinforcements, the riot spilled out into the street where a newsstand was set on fire and a police car had all its windows broken. Many were arrested that night, but like Stonewall, it wasn't over. The next evening more transgendered people showed up at Compton’s, along with the L, G, and B’s in the gay community. Militant hustlers and street queens, members of Vanguard, the first known gay youth organization in the United States, which had been organized with the help of radical ministers at Glide Memorial Church, came along as well. A lesbian group of street people, the Street Orphans, also went to Compton’s that night. It was a more civil demonstration that second night, with the community simply picketing the cafeteria whose new policy was not to allow transgendered people service. And, as happens, when it became apparent that their quiet march was getting them nowhere, the group, before disbanding, shattered the newly installed plate-glass windows of the cafeteria again. The Compton Cafeteria riots were a big deal in San Francisco in the 60s but have been largely forgotten over these last forty years. It wasn't until a documentary, Screaming Queens: The Riot at Compton's Cafeteria, that the story was reborn, and retold. On June 22, 2006, a memorial plaque was placed in the sidewalk in front of the cafeteria site, which is now the Oshun Center, a free clinic for women.It may not have been as big as Stonewall, but it was just as important, and may have lit that fuse in New York City three years later. |
Yes!
ReplyDeleteI’ve heard of these riots. Every act of resistance is valid. The sixties were full of rebellion against the stifling fifties and we’re going to resurrect that same energy now.
XOXO
Resist and Rebel and Speak the Fuck Up!
DeleteAnd CAST A GODDAMNED VOTE!!!
Thats right!!!! Stonewall is very important, but if not for the Pansy Craze and the Compton's Cafeteria Riots first, Stonewall would have been postponed much later or may have never even happened. If you ask me, we need the guts, fire and the rebellion of the 60's now...and for many reasons.
ReplyDeleteI'm not saying we need more bricks but we need more action, more loud voices, more everything!
DeleteThe more we know,
ReplyDeleteIt's our history, wee need to know who came before us and what they did to move us forward!
DeleteIt's an important part of history. And San Francisco is the much larger and well-known LGBTQ community than NYC. The Compton Riot is part of how that happened.
ReplyDeleteOther protests of note were :
ReplyDelete1959 Los Angeles, the riot at Cooper Donuts where people got tired of police raids.
1961 Milwaukee, the brawl at the Black Night Club where people confronted homophobic sailors.
1965 Philadelphia, the sit-in at Dewey’s Restaurant where people protested the policy of no service to gays.
1966 NYC, the sip in at Julius’ Tavern where people challenged liquor laws that closed down bars that served LGBTQ clientele.
1967 Los Angeles, the protests at the Black Cat Tavern where people demonstrated against police brutality following a raid on New Years.
It’s like that old cigarette commercial jingle “you’ve come along way baby to get where you’re going today !”
And God only knows of the protests and push back at other venues that went unreported.
-Rj
the dog's mother
ReplyDeletexoxo :-)