1290
-
First mention in English common law of a punishment for
homosexuality
1300
-
Treatise in England prescribed that sodomites should be
burned alive
1533
-
Buggery Act introduced by Henry VIII brought sodomy
within the scope of statute law for the first time and made it punishable by
hanging.
1861
-
Offences Against the Person Act formally abolished the
death penalty for buggery in England and Wales.
1869
-
First published use of the term ‘homosexuality’
(Homosexualitat) by Karoly Maria Kertbeny, a German-Hungarian campaigner.
1885
-
Labouchere amendment passed 7 August (Section 11 of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act). Created the offence of ‘gross indecency’ and
thus became the first specifically anti-homosexual act. It became known as
the ‘blackmailer’s charter’.
1895
-
The trials of Oscar Wilde and his sentencing to two
years prison with hard labour under the 1885 Act.
1897
-
English edition of the book Sexual Inversion by Havelock Ellis and John
Addington Symonds published. First book in English to treat homosexuality as
neither a disease nor a crime, maintaining that it was inborn and
unchangeable.
1900 - 1969
Nazi Persecution of Gay Men & Lesbians
Thriving gay and lesbian communities had developed in
Germany from 1900 to the early 1930s. This changed when the Nazis came into
power in 1933.
The Nazis declared aim was the eradication of homosexuality. During 12 years in
power they implemented a broad range of persecutory measures. An estimated
50,000 gay men were sentenced and imprisoned, some of whom faced the death
penalty. Up to 15,000 gay men were deported to concentration camps and made to
wear the pink triangle symbol which identified them as homosexual men. Many of
these Pink Triangle detainees were subjected to starvation and hard labour,
castration, medical experiments and collective murder actions.
Lesbianism was not illegal in Germany, so lesbians did not suffer the same level
of persecution as gay men. However, there is historical evidence of police
records being collected on lesbians and of lesbians being sent to concentration
camps on the grounds of their sexual orientation. They were known as Green
Triangle detainees. New research shows that in Austria lesbians were
criminalised and liable for prosecution and persecution.
After the war, neither the Allies nor the German or Austrian States recognised
gay men or lesbians as victims alongside other groups, so they were not
considered eligible for compensation. Only in 2001 was the German and Swiss Bank
compensation programme extended to include gay victims.
Nazi laws against homosexuality remained in place in Germany until 1967.
Unsurprisingly, very few victims of wartime persecution came forward to fight
for recognition. Those that did were often further victimised. Comparatively few
known victims are still alive today.
1948
-
Alfred Kinsey published Sexual Behaviour in the Human
Male which stated that 4% of men identified as exclusively homosexual and
37% had enjoyed at least one homosexual experience in their lives.
1953
-
Kinsey published Sexual Behaviour in the Human Female
which stated that 2% of women identified as exclusively lesbian and 13% had
enjoyed at least one lesbian experience in their lives.
1954
-
Appointment of the Wolfenden Committee on 24 August to
consider the law in Britain relating to homosexual offences.
1956
-
The Sexual Offences Act became law, determining much
police activity against homosexuals in the UK for the rest of the century.
1957
-
Wolfenden Report published on 3 September.
1958
-
Foundation of the Homosexual Law Reform Society (HLRS)
on 12 May.
1960
-
HLRS held its first public meeting on 12 May.
1961
-
Release of the film Victim, the most important British
film on a gay theme pleading for tolerance towards homosexuals and an end to
the blackmail of gay men.
1967
-
Sexual Offences Act came into force in England and
Wales and decriminalised homosexual acts between two men over 21 years of
age and ‘in private.’
1969
-
Scottish Minorities Group (SMG) founded on 9 May.
-
Stonewall riot began in New York on the night of 27/28 June.
-
Gay Liberation Front & Gay Activists Alliance set up in New York.
-
Committee for Homosexual Equality (CHE) formed in Britain.
1970 - 1979
1970
-
First ever organised lesbian and gay pride march took place on 28 June in
New York City commemorating the previous year’s Stonewall riot.
-
London Gay Liberation Front (GLF) founded at the London School of Economics
on 13 October.
-
First gay demonstration in the UK took place in Highbury Fields in
Islington.
1971
-
Committee for Homosexual Equality changed its name to the Campaign for
Homosexual Equality.
-
GLF organised first open gay dance in the UK at Kensington Town Hall &
published a manifesto.
-
First gay march through London took place, ending with a rally in Trafalgar
Square, protesting against the unequal age of consent for gay men.
-
Lesbians invaded the platform of the Women’s Liberation Conference in
Skegness, demanding recognition.
1972
-
Law Lords found the International Times magazine guilty of ‘conspiracy to
corrupt public morals’ for publishing gay contact advertisements.
-
Gay News, UK’s first gay newspaper, founded.
-
SMG launched a campaign to decriminalise homosexuality in Scotland.
-
First UK Pride carnival and march through London held on 1 July.
1973
-
First UK gay helpline founded in Oxford.
-
First national gay rights conference was held by CHE in Morecombe.
1974
-
Campaign for Homosexual Law Reform (Northern Ireland) appealed to the
European Court of Human Rights to force the UK to extend the 1967 Sexual
Offences Act to them.
-
First national lesbian conference held in Canterbury.
-
SMG bought a building to set up a Gay Centre in Edinburgh (where homosexual
acts were still illegal).
-
London Gay Switchboard (later London Lesbian and Gay Switchboard) was
launched. It went 24 hours within a year.
-
First International Gay Rights Conference held in Edinburgh.
-
South London Gay Community Centre opened in a Brixton squat.
1975
-
Action for Lesbian Parents founded after three high-profile custody cases
where lesbians were refused custody of their children.
-
British Home Stores sacked openly gay trainee Tony Whitehead; a national
campaign subsequently picketed their stores.
1976
-
Lesbian and Gay Christian Movement (later called Lesbian & Gay Christians)
founded.
1977
-
Lord Arran’s Bill to reduce the gay age of consent to 18 defeated in the
House of Lords.
-
Ian Paisley launched ‘Save Ulster From Sodomy’ campaign.
-
Gay News prosecuted by Mary Whitehouse for ‘blasphemy’ after printing James
Kirkup’s poem about a Roman centurion having sex with Jesus of Nazareth.
1978
-
International Gay Association (later International Lesbian and
Gay Association – ILGA) launched at a meeting in Coventry.
1979
-
Gay Life, the first ever gay TV series, commissioned for British TV by
London Weekend Television.
1980 - 1989
1980
-
Male homosexuality decriminalised in Scotland.
-
European Commission ruled unanimously that the British government was guilty
of breaching Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights by
refusing to legalise consenting homosexual behaviour in Ulster.
-
First black lesbian and gay group founded.
1981
-
European Court of Human Rights found in favour of Northern Irish gays.
-
Ken Livingstone, the new leader of the Greater London Council (GLC),
promised support to gays and gave the first ‘gay grant’ to London Gay
Switchboard.
-
Capital Gay, a weekly London newspaper, founded.
1982
-
Male homosexuality decriminalised in Northern Ireland with the passing of
law reform in the House of Commons.
-
Terrence Higgins Trust launched, named after the gay man thought to be the
first to have died with AIDS in the UK.
1983
-
Peter Tatchell, a Labour Party candidate, defeated in a by-election in
Bermondsey after a vicious anti-gay campaign by tabloid newspapers and local
Liberals.
-
Questions asked in Parliament about ‘pretty police’ entrapment.
-
New lesbian and gay television series, One in Five, shown on Channel 4.
1984
-
Chris Smith, MP for Islington South in London, first MP to come out as gay
while in office.
-
GALOP, the first gay policing project, founded.
-
Gay Times began publication in May.
1985
-
GLC published Changing the World, a charter of gay rights.
-
London Lesbian and Gay Centre opened in Cowcross Street, Farringdon with a
grant from the GLC.
-
South Wales miners joined the Pride march to thank lesbians and gay men who
supported them during the coalminers strike.
1986
-
London Borough of Haringey's Lesbian and Gay Unit wrote to all school head
teachers in the borough urging them to promote positive images of
homosexuality to their pupils. A vicious backlash was provoked.
1987
-
The British Government delivered a leaflet on AIDS, with the London Lesbian
and Gay Switchboard telephone number, to every household in the country. The
switchboard phone lines overloaded with the response.
-
A South Staffordshire councillor called for 90% of lesbians and gays to be
gassed to prevent the spread of AIDS. A subsequent sit-in at the
councillor's house by 12 members of the Lesbian & Gay Youth Movement was
broken up violently by the local police and all were arrested and remanded
for 10 days. When the case went to court all were released and later legal
action taken against the police and the Crown Prosecution Service for
wrongful imprisonment was successful.
-
Clause 28 (actually with an ever-changing sequence of numbers) of the Local
Government Bill was introduced in the House of Commons on the 7 December.
-
The last National Lesbian and Gay Conference collapsed under factional
in-fighting.
-
Pink Paper founded.
1988
-
Section 28, preventing the ‘promotion’ of homosexuality by local
authorities, came into force on 24 May with backing from Local Government
minister Michael Howard. 10,000 protested in London and 15,000 in
Manchester.
-
Lesbians abseiled in the House of Lords and also got into BBC1’s newsroom,
while Sue Lawley was reading the Six O’Clock News, in protest against
Section 28.
-
The Norwegian foreign minister protested about Section 28 to the British
foreign minister. There were also protests in Amsterdam and New York.
-
The first British national conference for lesbians and gay men with
disabilities was held.
1989
-
Stonewall Group set up to oppose Section 28 and other blocks to equality for
lesbians and gay men. Founder members include Ian McKellen and Michael
Cashman.
-
Stonewall organised first lesbian and gay receptions at the Liberal
Democrat, Labour & Conservative Party conferences.
1990 - 1999
1990
-
Direct action group Outrage! set up in May after the murder in London of gay
actor Michael Boothe.
-
Successful lobby on the Human Embryo Fertilization & Embryology Bill
ensuring lesbians continued to have access to services.
1991
-
Lesbian & Gay Police Association (LAGPA, later the Gay Police Assoiciation
GPA) formed.
-
Stonewall makes major contribution to presentation of lesbian and gay
rights at United Nations.
-
Stonewall and ILGA given first European Community grant to survey gay rights
across the community.
-
Conservative Government persuaded not to amend paragraph 16 of the
Children’s Act in order to prevent lesbians and gays from adopting or
fostering.
-
Campaign commenced against Clauses 1, 2 & 25 of the Criminal Justice Bill.
-
Stonewall gave evidence to Special Select Committee of the Armed Forces
Bill.
-
First Stonewall Annual General Meeting held.
-
Roy Hattersley (Labour Deputy Leader) and Ian McKellen met with Conservative
Prime Minister to discuss his party's commitment to gay issues.
-
The Press Complaints Commission ruled in favour of Stonewall v The Daily
Star, a landmark ruling.
1992
-
London hosted the first Europride.
-
Isle of Man decriminalised homosexuality.
-
First opinion poll on attitudes to equal rights and age of consent.
-
Stonewall made representation to the Government asking for Rights of
Succession to be included in the forthcoming housing bill.
-
Gay Men Fighting AIDS (GMFA) founded.
1993
-
Stonewall launched first challenge to the European Court of Human Rights on
the age of consent with three gay teenagers aged 16 - 18; Hugo Grennhalgh,
Will Parry and Ralph Wild.
-
The Bar Council & Law Society included Sexual Orientation in Professional
Practice Rules.
-
Stonewall & ILGA produced first European survey of lesbian & gay rights for
the European Commission.
1994
-
House of Commons voted to reduce gay male age of consent to 18. Huge
disappointment that it had not been reduced to 16.
-
Stonewall and Euan Sutherland launched an appeal to the European Court for
under 18s.
-
Lesbian Avengers founded.
-
Outrage! ‘outed’ eight bishops, and provoked debate within the Church of
England.
-
Male rape amendment debated in the House of Commons and House of Lords and
included in the Crime Bill.
1995
-
Gay Times went on sale in high street stores owned by the John Menzies
newsagents chain for the first time in May.
-
Biggest ever London Pride - almost 200,000 people attended the
celebrations in the East End's Victoria Park.
-
Rank Outsiders and Stonewall launched a major campaign against the ban on
gays in the military.
-
Gaytime TV launched and one million tuned in every week.
-
Capital Gay folded with its last issue on 31 June.
-
Freedom FM ran the first ever UK lesbian and gay ‘restricted service
license’ radio broadcasts in London.
-
First challenge to the High Court on the ban in the Armed Forces.
-
Launch of the Corporate Employment Discrimination Survey.
-
Stonewall Parenting Group formed.
-
First Lobby on the Sexual Offences Discrimination Bill.
1996
-
Stonewall produced ‘Queer Bashing’ report & survey results.
-
Lisa Grant challenged South West Trains for employment discrimination.
-
Inland Revenue published new guidelines recognising same-sex partners in
pension schemes.
1997
-
GCHQ relaxed its regulations relating to the employment of gays and
lesbians. Subsequently M16 also changed its policy, but M15 refused
to change.
-
Stonewall & THT commissioned Playing it Safe, new research showing wide
spread homophobic bullying in schools.
-
The Commission of the ECHR found in the case of Euan Sutherland that unequal
age of consent violates convention rights.
-
On 1 May the British general election went to Labour and gave seats to
out-gays Ben Bradshaw and Stephen Twigg.
-
On 3 May Chris Smith became Britain’s first out-gay cabinet minister when
appointed National Heritage Secretary.
-
New Labour Government recognised same sex partners for immigration purposes.
-
On 3 September Labour MP Angela Eagle was the first British MP to come out
voluntarily as a lesbian.
1998
-
Two more British Labour MPs, David Borrow and Gordon Marsden, came out as
gay.
-
336 MPs voted in the House of Commons, an overwhelming majority vote for an
equal age of consent.
-
Gregory Woods appointed the first Professor of Lesbian and Gay studies in
the UK.
-
On 22 June the British House of Commons voted to set the age of consent for
gay men at 16 in a debate on the Crime and Disorder Bill.
-
Waheed Alli took his place in House of Lords as the UK’s first openly gay
life peer.
-
On 22 July the House of Lords defeated the clause to lower the age of
consent to 16 for gay men.
-
Nick Brown MP became the first British Cabinet minister to come out publicly
as gay while in post.
1999
-
On 30 April, a bomb exploded in the Admiral Duncan, a gay pub in Old Compton
Street, Soho, the third in a series of bombs targeted at minorities by a
lone extremist. Three people died and 80 were injured.
-
Immigration policy changed, meaning gay couples only needed to fulfil a two
year, rather than four, probationary period.
-
Law Society proposed that unmarried partners, including same sex couples,
should be legally recognised.
-
DfEE agreed to develop voluntary codes of practice on sexual orientation
discrimination in the workplace.
-
ECHR overturned the ban on gays in the armed forces.
-
Rail companies finally agreed to give same sex partners the same travel
subsidies as heterosexual couples.
-
House of Commons agreed on amendment to the GLA Bill to cover equal
opportunities.
-
Dame Butler-Sloss, Chair of the Family Law Division, stated that gays should
be able to foster and adopt and the Children’s Society lifted their five
year ban on lesbian and gay fostering and adoption.
-
House of Lords ruled that same sex partners should be treated as family and
have the right to succeed a tenancy.
-
Law Commission proposed that partners of same-sex couples should be able to
claim damages in fatal accident cases.
-
Over 30,000 Stonewall supporters returned ‘Repeal Section 28’ postcards
addressed to Hilary Armstrong MP.
-
Scotland proposed to repeal Section 28 as part of the Ethical Standards in
Public Life Bill.
-
Angela Mason received an OBE for services to the gay community and appeared
in the Observer’s 300 most powerful people in the UK.
-
Reduction of the Age of Consent to 16 included in the Queen’s speech.
-
Repeal of Section 28 included in the Local Government Bill.
-
Ex-Minister Michael Portillo quoted as saying that he had ‘homosexual
experiences’ in his youth.
-
Metropolitan police launch initiative against hate crimes, including
homophobic crime.
post 2000
2000
-
Government lifts the ban on lesbian and gay men serving in the armed forces.
-
The report Setting the Boundaries published by the Sexual Offences Review
Group.
-
Ruling by the European Court on Human Rights results in the need to re-draft
UK sexual offences law.
2001
-
Age of consent reduced to 16.
-
Stonewall sets up the Diversity Champions programme for employers committed
to equality for lesbians and gay men in the workplace.
-
Launch of Stonewall’s Citizenship 21 Project, set up to encourage
communities experiencing different kinds of discrimination to work together.
-
First same-sex partnerships registered in London at the GLA.
2002
-
Equal rights granted to same sex couples applying for adoption.
-
Alan Duncan became the first serving British Conservative Party MP to
voluntarily come out publicly as gay.
2003
-
Ben Summerskill replaces Angela Mason as Stonewall’s chief executive.
-
Repeal of Section 28.
-
Employment Equality (Sexual Orientation) Regulations became law on 1
December making it illegal to discriminate against lesbians, gay men and
bisexuals in the workplace.
-
Proposed Civil Partnership Bill included in the Queen’s speech.
2004
-
Civil Partnership Bill introduced.
-
Sexual Offences Act abolishes the crimes of buggery and gross indecency.
-
Stonewall sets up partnerships with Friends and Families of Lesbians and
Gays (FFLAG) and Lesbian & Gay Youth Scotland to discuss homophobic bullying
in schools.
-
Government launches a white paper Fairness for All: A new Commission for
Equality and Human Rights covering all areas of inequality in terms of race,
gender, disability, sexual orientation, age and religion.
-
Stonewall publishes Understanding Prejudice – Attitudes towards minorities,
a follow-up to Profiles of Prejudice looking at the nature of prejudice in
Britain.
-
Civil Partnership Act passed in November, giving same-sex couples the same
rights and responsibilities as married heterosexual couples.
2005
-
Stonewall launches Education for All in January, a campaign to tackle
homophobia and homophobic bullying in schools.
-
Government announces that the first civil partnerships for same sex couples
can be registered on 5 December, taking effect from 21 December (after the
15 day waiting period).
-
Section 146 of the Criminal Justice Act 2003 implemented in April,
empowering courts to impose tougher sentences for offences aggravated or
motivated by the victim’s sexual orientation.
-
First civil partnerships take place in Northern Ireland on 19 December 2005,
followed by Scotland on 20 December and then England and Wales on 21
December.
-
Government amends the Equality Bill, including a clause to make it illegal
to discriminate against lesbians and gay men in the provision of goods and
services – from NHS care through to hotels and restaurants.
2006
-
The Equality Act 2006 - which establishes the CEHR and makes discrimination
against lesbians and gay men in the provision of goods and services
illegal -gains Royal assent on 16 February 2006.
-
Stonewall launches Speak Out online, the largest survey of young people's
experiences of homophobic bullying in school (May).
-
Section 28 repealed in the Isle of Man.
-
Stonewall holds its first Education Conference looking at tackling
homophobic bullying targeting education professionals (July).
-
The Channel Island of Jersey undertakes to review equalising the age of
consent for lesbian and gay young people.
-
The first Stonewall Awards are presented to those people and organisations
who have supported lesbian and gay people.
2007
-
The Prime Minister, Tony Blair, gives a keynote speech at Stonewall's annual
Equality Dinner in March.
-
The Equality Act (Sexual Orientation) Regulations 2007 becomes law on 30
April making discrimination against lesbians and gay men in the provision of
goods and services illegal.
-
Stonewall launches 'The Colour of Your Money', a plain English guide to the
protections for gay people in the provision of goods and services.
-
Stonewall launches 'Living Together: British attitudes to lesbian and gay
people', a YouGov survey to investigate the nature of feelings towards
lesbian and gay people in Britain.
-
Stonewall holds its first Gay Youth Event in June for young lesbian, gay and
bisexual people, held at the City Hall in London. ** Information From
STONEWALL **