SAM EDMISTON
Sam Edmiston was born to Samuel Richard and Stella Mae Thomas Edmiston on July 17, 1945 in Middleburg, PA. He enrolled in U.S. Navy in April of 1963 three weeks after his high school graduation and then was dishonorably discharged for being gay in 1966. He fought to change the discharge and his papers were later changed to a “general discharge under general conditions.” He moved back in with his parents and started working at a local shoe factory, and then worked at Laurelton State Center (residential facility for the mentally and physically challenged). He attended Bloomsburg State College in 1973 and graduated with a degree in Sociology with a focus in social welfare. He worked various jobs and then retired after 7 years for personal health reasons. He then found a job with the Social Security Administration through Administrative Careers of America, then retired after 10 years and now resides in Central PA.
Throughout and after college he was active in the pursuit of gay rights. He started Susquehanna Valley Gay Rights United in 1976 (with his friend Sam Deetz), was the secretary for the PA Rural Gay Caucas, contributed to the Lancaster Gay Era Newspaper, and was part of Dignity/Central PA. |
JOSEPH W. BURNS
Joseph W. Burns was an early gay activist from Central Pennsylvania. He contributed a significant amount of materials to the LGBT Center of Central PA History Project collection at the Dickinson College Archives and Special Collections. In 1967 Burns came out and moved away from home, he began to go to different libraries and bookstores to research “about [anything] to do with homosexual.” (1) From this exploration of he discovered the Mattachine Society which was a early prominent gay organization located in major U.S. cities, he was in both the Philadelphia and New York chapters.
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A few months after joining Mattachine in 1969, Burns got a letter from Ron Seeds, a fellow member of the Mattachine, who was interested in further establishing activist organizations in Central PA. Seeds had just founded the Lehigh Valley Homophile Organization, or more commonly referred to as Le-Hi-Ho. Burns joined Le-Hi-Ho and became very involved in the starting of the group.
As the gay liberation movement grew in the 1970s, Burns was heavily involved in LGBTQ+ and women's rights groups, protests, and marches. He also used his passion for activism at the state level with his contributions to both the PA Rural Gay Caucus and the Human Rights Commission when they were trying to pass a gay rights ordnance in the Leigh Valley.
As the gay liberation movement grew in the 1970s, Burns was heavily involved in LGBTQ+ and women's rights groups, protests, and marches. He also used his passion for activism at the state level with his contributions to both the PA Rural Gay Caucus and the Human Rights Commission when they were trying to pass a gay rights ordnance in the Leigh Valley.
JERRY BRENNAN
Jerry was the second activist to form LGBTQ+ organizations in Harrisburg. The two organizations he formed were the Gay Switchboard of Harrisburg (April 1975) and Dignity/Central PA (July 1975). (4) Gay Switchboard of Harrisburg was said to be a "kind of queer 911" and produced newsletters as well. (5) Dignity/Central PA was a chapter of the Catholic gay organization. It allowed members--many who identified as Protestant or Jewish--to congregate beyond the bar scene. He was also a member of the Governor's Task Force that fought for gay right. (6)
-Linked is the transcript of a meeting he was apart of while in the Task Force (7) -Linked is a book in about the LGBTQ+ community in Central PA he was mentioned in (8) |
LORRAINE KUJAWA, MARY NACARROW, AND CINDY MITZEL
Lorraine Kujawa, Mary Nancarrow, Cindy Mitzel, and several others were responsible for starting the Lavender Letter newsletter in 1983. The newsletter was a calendar of events for, by, and about lesbian women to create community in the Central PA area.
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MORE ON MARY NANCARROW...
Mary Nancarrow was born and raised in the Harrisburg area, she participated as an early activist with the movements for LGBTQ+ and women’s rights, in Central Pennsylvania. She was one of the founders of the Pennsylvania Rural Gay Caucus which advocated for LGBTQ+ rights in conjunction with Governor Milton Shapp’s Council for Sexual Minorities.
Mary was also one of the creators of the Lavender Letter Newsletter in 1983 which was monthly calendar of social and other types of events that were hosted with the purpose and goal of having a community for lesbian women, created by lesbian women, in the Central Pennsylvania area. Along with her work on the Rural Gay Cacus and her contributions to the Lavender Letter, Mary was extremely involved with the National Orginzation for Women (NOW). In 1983, she was elected NOW Pennsylvania President were she lobbied heavily for the Marital Rape Act and other resources for domestic violence and reproductive rights in PA. (3) |
Citations
1. Joseph W. Burns, interviewed by Lonna Malmsheimer, 24 May 2013, LGBT Oral History 012A, LGBT History Project, Archives and Special Collections, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA.
2. Mary Nancarrow, interviewed by Ann Van Dyke, 9 October 2013, LGBT Oral History 084A, LGBT History Project, Archives and Special Collections, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA.
3.. Jude Sharp (Left) and Lorraine Kujawa (right) at the First Community Recognition Banquet hosted at Miss Garbo's Tea Room in Carlisle, PA, 1992. Courtesy of LGBT-007, Dickinson College Archives.
4. Jerry Brennan, "Harrisburg LGBTQ+ History Tour," accessed May 2, 2022, LGBT History Project, Archives and Special Collections, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA, https://content.web-repository.com/s/78215815290718836/uploads/History_Project/History_Tour-0315458.pdf.
5. Jerry Brennan, "The team behind PGN, Volume 1," LGBT History Project, Archives and Special Collections, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA, accessed May 2, 2022, https://epgn.com/2016/04/06/the-team-behind-pgn-volume-1/.
6. Jerry Brennan"After SODOMY REFORM - -- What next?," accessed May 2, 2022, LGBT History Project, Archives and Special Collections, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA, http://www.unmarriedamerica.org/Archives/1979-Gov-Brown-Executive-Order/1975-After-Sodomy-Reform-Press-Release-Kit.pdf.
7. Jerry Brennan, "Out in Central PennsylvaniaThe History of an LGBTQ Community," accessed May 2, 2022, LGBT History Project, Archives and Special Collections, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA, https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9780271086477/html.
8. Jerry Brennan, "The Heroic Struggle to Be Out in Central Pennsylvania," accessed May 2, 2022, LGBT History Project, Archives and Special Collections, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA, https://provincetownindependent.org/arts-minds/2020/06/25/the-heroic-struggle-to-be-out-in-central-pennsylvania/.
9. Sam Edmiston, "Susquehanna Valley Gays United Banner," accessed May 5 2022, LGBT Oral History 041 , LGBT History Project, Archives and Special Collections, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA.
10. Sam Edmiston, "Civil Rights March in Harrisburg, PA - circa 1977" accessed May 5 2022, LGBT Oral History 041 , LGBT History Project, Archives and Special Collections, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA.
11. Jan Britton, "Various Publications in LGBT accessed May 5 2022, LGBT Oral History 064 , LGBT History Project, Archives and Special Collections, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA.
1. Joseph W. Burns, interviewed by Lonna Malmsheimer, 24 May 2013, LGBT Oral History 012A, LGBT History Project, Archives and Special Collections, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA.
2. Mary Nancarrow, interviewed by Ann Van Dyke, 9 October 2013, LGBT Oral History 084A, LGBT History Project, Archives and Special Collections, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA.
3.. Jude Sharp (Left) and Lorraine Kujawa (right) at the First Community Recognition Banquet hosted at Miss Garbo's Tea Room in Carlisle, PA, 1992. Courtesy of LGBT-007, Dickinson College Archives.
4. Jerry Brennan, "Harrisburg LGBTQ+ History Tour," accessed May 2, 2022, LGBT History Project, Archives and Special Collections, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA, https://content.web-repository.com/s/78215815290718836/uploads/History_Project/History_Tour-0315458.pdf.
5. Jerry Brennan, "The team behind PGN, Volume 1," LGBT History Project, Archives and Special Collections, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA, accessed May 2, 2022, https://epgn.com/2016/04/06/the-team-behind-pgn-volume-1/.
6. Jerry Brennan"After SODOMY REFORM - -- What next?," accessed May 2, 2022, LGBT History Project, Archives and Special Collections, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA, http://www.unmarriedamerica.org/Archives/1979-Gov-Brown-Executive-Order/1975-After-Sodomy-Reform-Press-Release-Kit.pdf.
7. Jerry Brennan, "Out in Central PennsylvaniaThe History of an LGBTQ Community," accessed May 2, 2022, LGBT History Project, Archives and Special Collections, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA, https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9780271086477/html.
8. Jerry Brennan, "The Heroic Struggle to Be Out in Central Pennsylvania," accessed May 2, 2022, LGBT History Project, Archives and Special Collections, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA, https://provincetownindependent.org/arts-minds/2020/06/25/the-heroic-struggle-to-be-out-in-central-pennsylvania/.
9. Sam Edmiston, "Susquehanna Valley Gays United Banner," accessed May 5 2022, LGBT Oral History 041 , LGBT History Project, Archives and Special Collections, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA.
10. Sam Edmiston, "Civil Rights March in Harrisburg, PA - circa 1977" accessed May 5 2022, LGBT Oral History 041 , LGBT History Project, Archives and Special Collections, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA.
11. Jan Britton, "Various Publications in LGBT accessed May 5 2022, LGBT Oral History 064 , LGBT History Project, Archives and Special Collections, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA.