Following the Supreme Court’s landmark decision to strike down the discriminatory Defense of Marriage Act Wednesday, 84-year-old plaintiff Edie Windsor headed to the most obvious place imaginable for celebrating a gay rights victory: Greenwich Village’s Stonewall Inn.
“To all of the gay people and their supporters who cheered me on, thank you, thank you, thank you,” said Windsor to hundreds of people outside the historic establishment, where more than four decades ago, the nation’s first gay rights leaders emerged.
The mood was festive with drinks and rainbow flags flowing inside the bar, while out on the street, Cher’s Believe blared from the loudspeakers. Forty-four years earlier, the scene outside 53 Christopher Street looked very different.
In the early hours of June 28, 1969, patrons of the Stonewall Inn, one of New York’s most popular gay bars, refused to quietly cooperate with a police raid. Back then, such sweeps were common. But on this particular Friday night, the reaction was far from routine.
“The normal thing for a bar raid would be to come in on a slow night; the normal thing would be to arrest employees, but not patrons,” said Rich Wandel, archivist and historian at the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Community Center. “But for whatever reason, on this night the police decided they were really going to shut this place down, and they just began smashing things.”
In the late sixties, LGBT people had no protections in place, said Wandel. The State Liquor Authority enforced a “moral turpitude” policy that barred serving homosexuals alcohol. In addition, anti-cross dressing laws required that people wear at least three items of their birth gender’s clothing. And two people of the same sex couldn’t even dance with each other without fear of being arrested.
“Everything was very underground,” said Ellen Kahn, director of Human Rights Campaign’s Family Project. “For the few and the proud and the brave who did come out, there were often pretty severe consequences, from being fired to being physically beaten in broad daylight…What people needed was to feel like they had a community. Some way to connect so that you could live a life that felt a little more authentic.”
For many, that place ended up being a bar. Gay and lesbian couples would come together, ready to swap dance partners at the drop of a police hat so that–should an officer appear–men would be dancing with women. The Stonewall Inn, like many gay bars at the time, was very much an illegal operation.
“If the cops raided the place you used to break the bottles with a hammer,” said the current bartender at Stonewall, who goes by Tree, a fitting name for a man of his height. “Homosexuality was against the law. It was a disease.”
Tree was a regular in the gay community’s underground bar scene forty-four years ago, and had come to Stonewall for a night of dancing when the riot broke out. Neighborhood police would often raid gay bars to collect money from the owners for serving liquor without a license, he said. The cops would jot down names of the patrons, which were almost always made up (Tree went by “Fenwick Fingernail” if pressed by an officer), but would rarely dismantle the place to the point where it couldn’t reopen the next night. If the cops did arrest patrons, they would pay their fines and leave. They didn’t turn to violence.
When police officers began rounding up people at Stonewall on the night of June 28, however, they started to fight back. One woman repeatedly jumped out of the police car she was thrown into, as a crowd of people gathered on the street.
“The street people started throwing pennies at the cops,” said Wandel. “The cops got frightened, so they locked themselves in the bar with the patrons.”
The mob swelled as the police waited inside for backup. Pennies turned into bricks, and bricks turned into a parking meter, which the crowd managed to uproot in an attempt to ram the door.
“After we ran out of things to throw like bottles and bricks, we lit garbage cans on fire and started to throw those,” said Tree, who was 30 years old at the time.
It was a full-on riot and, although the participants didn’t know it, the beginning of the gay rights movement.









