Gay rights activist who advocated hard line against discrimination 

http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/obituaries/2011/0924/1224304672975.html 




September 24, 2011 




Arthur Evans: ARTHUR EVANS, who helped form and lead the movement in the United 
States that coalesced after gay people and their supporters protested against a 
1969 police raid on the Stonewall Inn, a New York gay bar, has died from a 
heart attack at his home in San Francisco. He was 68. 

Evans was not at the Stonewall disturbances, but they fuelled in him a militant 
fervour and inspired him to join the Gay Liberation Front, an organisation 
started during the wave of gay assertiveness that followed. For Evans and other 
militants, however, the group was not assertive enough. They worried that it 
was diluting its effectiveness by taking stands on issues beyond gay rights – 
opposing the Vietnam War and racial discrimination, for example. 

So in December 1969 they split off to found the Gay Activists Alliance, 
choosing a name to suggest more aggressive tactics. 

Based in New York, the alliance became a model for gay rights organisations 
across the US, pushing in New York for legislation to ban discrimination 
against gay men and lesbians in employment, housing and other areas. Evans 
wrote its statement of purpose and much of its constitution. which began, “We 
as liberated homosexual activists demand the freedom for expression of our 
dignity and value as human beings.” 

To attract attention the alliance staged what its members called “zaps”, 
confrontations with people or institutions that they believed discriminated 
against gay people. Among other incidents, they confronted mayor John V Lindsay 
of New York and went to television studios to protest about shows perceived as 
anti-gay, demanded gay marriage rights at the city’s marriage licence bureau, 
and demonstrated at the taxi commission against a regulation, since abolished, 
requiring gay people to get a psychiatrist’s approval before they could be 
allowed to drive a taxi. 

Evans was born in York, Pennsylvania. His father was a factory worker who had 
dropped out of elementary school, and his mother ran a beauty shop in the front 
room of the family house. 

He attended Brown University on a scholarship and there joined a group of 
self-styled “militant atheists”, but left after three years and headed for New 
York’s Greenwich Village, having read in Life magazine that it welcomed gay 
people. In New York, he transferred to City College and switched from political 
science to philosophy. 

Graduating in 1967, he entered the doctoral programme in philosophy at 
Columbia, where he studied ancient Greek philosophy and participated in 
anti-war protests. 

However, becoming disenchanted with academia, he withdrew from Columbia in 1972 
and moved to rural Washington state, where he and a companion, calling 
themselves the Weird Sisters Partnership, tended a small patch of forest land 
and lived in a tent. 

When the Washington experiment failed, Evans and his companion moved to San 
Francisco. There, they opened a Volkswagen repair shop they named the Buggery. 

After settling in San Francisco, he wrote Witchcraft and the Gay Counterculture 
and Critique of Patriarchal Reason (1997). 

Growing up, Evans had hid his sexual orientation, though he himself was aware 
of it at 10, he said. By November 1970, when he was scheduled to appear on The 
Dick Cavett Show with other gay leaders, he had still not told his parents that 
he was gay. But, by his account, he did tell them he was going to be on 
national television. 

Thrilled, they told friends and neighbours to tune in. Evans later said he 
regretted his handling of the matter. 


Arthur Evans, born October 12th, 1942; died September 11th, 2011 




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