Vintage photos of LGBTQ persons, figures, and couples:
early to mid-Twentieth Century.
Vintage LGBTQ: Male couples
Vintage LGBTQ: Female couples/drag kings
Bathing Beauties " Labeled "Mae Snyder." This could be two women just standing close for the camera, but take a look at the backward tilt of the one woman's hand, reaching back affectionately to touch the other woman. Intimate. I don't know which one is Mae. This photo is from John Lampert's collection of gay and lesbian vintage photos."
Affectionate Young WomenThe back of this photo is dated "Dec. 19, 1913."
Women in a Hammock "Nothing on this image tells me who these women are, and I can't make out their faces well enough to determine their ages. Friends, sisters, mother-daughter pair? Lovers? I don't know, but the intimacy portrayed here is heart-warming nonetheless."
Butch-Femme Party "This great image is really brought to life by the details. View
the close-ups of couples to get a better sense of this portrait. "
1940s 1950s lesbian couple via
missing_linck's phototream | Flickr
1930s lesbian couple at club via
missing_linck's phototream | Flickr
1950s lesbian couple via
missing_linck's phototream | Flickr
Sailing is a drag, 1902 via
The Library of Congress /
bobster855's photostream | Flickr
photo from Sharon Weinman via "
Gender Bending Women, early-20th c."
Starving in the Midst of Plenty"Is this a guy card or what? This girls are famous -- the are the stars of the "Sometimes Girls Kiss Each Other" series. There is no date on this card, but the fashions appear to be from the 1900-1910 era. It's hard to imagine the environment that made this image -- and it's counterpart -- so popular. Go figure. "
chez moune niteclub 1963 via
missing_linck @ Flickr
female guest at le monocle--1932 via
missing_linck @ Flickr
Matilda Alice Powles (13 May 1864 - 16 September 1952), was an English male impersonator. At the age of 11, she adopted the stage name Vesta Tilley becoming the most famous and well paid music hall male impersonator of her day. She was a star in both Britain and the United States for over thirty years.
Full Wiki article↑ OP's Aside: Vesta Tilley is said to have been
the template for Julie Andrews' Victor/Victoria character.
Winifred Emms (4 April 1883 - 28 September 1972), best known by her stage name Hetty King, was an English entertainer who played in the music halls over a period of 70 years. [...] By 1905, she was appearing in music halls, with her solo act, as a male impersonator, often dressed as a "swell". Her career spanned both World Wars when she performed in the uniform of either a soldier or a sailor. In the First World War her acrt included, in 1916, "Songs the soldiers sing" when she sang some of the less rude of the songs invented by soldiers in the trenches.
Full Wiki article 1920s 1930s drag king via
missing_linck @ Flickr
Vintage LGBTQ: POC couples, figures, drag kings/queens
A FEMME AND HER "MR. DANDY" IN OLD JAPAN by
Okinawa Soba via
flickriver SMOKIN' HOT "EMIKO", THE SMILING GEISHAby
Okinawa Soba via
flickriver Blues pianist
Tony Jackson (above) was one of the many homosexual migrants who decided to leave their native South to take advantage of Chicago’s freedom. [...] Despite his great popularity as a musician, Jackson often complained about the tough homosexual life in New Orleans [birth city]. In search of a place of residence more receptive to his music and sexual orientation, the musician migrated to Chicago in 1912.
[5] But before reaching Chicago, Jackson stopped in Louisville, KY where he met one of the leading pianists of the town, Glover Compton (seen at bottom) with whom he had a long-term friendship.
[6] Full:
Tony Jackson, A Gay Blues Pianist from ChicagoFull:
Tony Jackson (pianist) - Wikipedia Gladys Bentley (12 August 1907 - 18 January 1960) was an American blues singer during the Harlem Renaissance. [...] She appeared at Harry Hansberry's "Clam House" on 133rd Street, one of New York City's most notorious gay speakeasies, in the 1920s, and headlined in the early thirties at Harlem's Ubangi Club, where she was backed up by a chorus line of drag queens. [...] Bentley was openly lesbian during her early career,
[1] but during the McCarthy Era, she started wearing dresses, married a man (who later denied that they ever married), and studied to be a minister, claiming to have been "cured" by taking female hormones.
[2][3] She died, aged 52, from pneumonia in 1960.
Full Wiki |
Video clip excerpt from the documentary, Before Stonewall.
Bessie Smith, 1936"Empress of the Blues" is the regal title rightly bestowed upon Bessie Smith, whose history has been filled with persistent, colorful legends. Gifted with a powerful voice and sophisticated musical artistry, she conducted her life by her own set of rules and had affairs with both men and women.
full bio | account of her
harrowing death Photo by Carl Van Vechten, the National Archives via
bobster855 @ Flickr
1940s 'louise'via
missing_linck @ Flickr
Queer Religious Leaders: Clarence Cobbs
Commonly called “Preacher,” Reverend Clarence Cobbs was the leader of the First Church of Deliverance, the most popular church in Bronzeville. While he never publicly revealed or discussed his homosexuality, neither did he hide it.
Cont'd @ Queer Bronzeville collection | OutHistory.org
Queer Religious Leaders: Mary Evans
Mary Evans, second pastor of the Cosmopolitan Community Church was rumored to be a lesbian because of her relationship choices. Evans never married but had two long-term relationships with other women. She met Harriet Kelley, her first long-term friend, when she was a young preacher in Indiana. Edan Cook, daughter of William D. Cook, was her long-term friend for the rest of her life. Evans often qualified her as her “sister.”
Cont'd @ Queer Bronzeville collection | OutHistory.org
Queer Religious Leaders: Elder Lucy Smith Lucy Smith was a symbol of the important role Black women played in Chicago’s religious world. Smith was the “overseer” of an entire “General Conference of Churches” of which her “All Nations Pentecostal Church” was the main church.
Historian Wallace Best noted that several sources from the 1930s characterized Lucy Smith, as well as many other female religious leaders, as “plain,” “buxom,” “plump and brown,” or “homely,” commenting on their “deep voices.” Samuel Strong concluded that “women preachers were somewhat mannish, overweight, and hoarse, and usually lesbian.”
↑ OP's Aside: ...wut.
Algerian Girls (c.1906) by
postaletrice via
flickriverVintage photographic postcard, c.1906, divided back, written but uncirculated,
published by the photographer Jean Geiser, Alger, Algeria.
Thanks to
poetic_pixie_13 for the photo hook-up <3
Two women, 1899 From the Library of Congress /
bobster855 @ Flickr
Winnebago womenPhoto taken circa 1862 -1875
New York Public Library /
bobster855 @ Flickr
photograph by diego rivera, 1941 from Frida Kahlo: The Camera Seduced via
flickriver Photo untitledvia
WanderingCaravan | Blogspot.com
"
Secret Prom Date, 1959"
via
WanderingCaravan | Blogspot.com
"
Afro American Men: Soldier and lover, 1950s"
via
WanderingCaravan | Blogspot.com
"
Afro Americans, late 1920s,
gay and straight mix"
via
WanderingCaravan | Blogspot.com
Young writers of Middle Asia
with the American writer [Langston Hughes]"Young writers of Central Asia, Hughes [notable Harlem Renaissance-era writer] in the middle. On the backside of the photo there are
descriptions in Cyrillic, which the [Yale University Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library] hasn't bothered to decipher."
↑ OP's Aside: There's no indication/implication that the writers photographed,
other than Hughes in the center, were gay. Still a hot photo of handsome guys, though.
Bobby Marchan (born Oscar James Gibson, 30 April 1930 in Youngstown Ohio - died 5 December 1999) was a well-respected American rhythm and blues bandleader, MC, singer-performer, recording artist, and female impersonator, who initially began performing in New Orleans nightclubs, specifically the Dew Drop Inn and the Club Tijuana in the mid 1950s.
[1] Wikipedia |
Queer Music Heritage stub Petite Swanson was a member of Valda Gray's troupe of female impersonators, who for much of the 1940s were the main attraction at Joe's Deluxe Club in Chicago. She recorded four sides in 1947 for the Sunbeam label, and I believe only two were released. Very rare indeed.
Petite Swanson info stub @ Queer Music Heritage
OP's Aside: note that that gentleman standing next to Petite Swanson in the fourth photo panel is Bobby Marchan (picspammed just above).
↓ The following newspaper scans came from QUEER BRONZEVILLE: THE HISTORY OF AFRICAN AMERICAN GAYS AND LESBIANS ON CHICAGO'S SOUTH SIDE via the following stubs:
Queer Business: The Case of Joe HughesGay life in 1940's Bronzeville: The Story of "Nancy Kelly" ~FIN~
Source/full galleries: