Sort by:

Celebrating Gay Community News at 50

GCN, Volume 1, Number 2, June 28, 1973

This year is the 50th anniversary of Gay Community News (GCN). Join The History Project, and our partners, Massachusetts Historical Society, American LGBTQ+ Museum, and Northeastern University Archives & Special Collections for a series of panels exploring GCN's history and legacy.

In 1973, a small group of gay men and lesbians founded a local Boston newsletter to report on LGBTQ+ events. That newsletter grew into a major newspaper with an international readership. Volunteer writers, photographers, artists, and other members of the LGBTQ+ community published GCN through the 1990s. The publication itself is a rich historical source providing insight into the many issues concerning the gay community, and many of its contributors continue to have an impact on LGBTQ+ organizing and culture to this day. THP holds GCN's photograph collections and a full run of GCN. GCN is also now available digitally via Northeastern University.

All three panels will take place at the Massachusetts Historical Society and will be hybrid to accommodate both local and long-distance participation. Please RSVP for an in-person or virtual ticket here.

Interested in supporting our GCN at 50 events and oral histories? Click here to make a tax-deductible donation to The History Project. We can also accept checks made out to The History Project (just write GCN in the memo field) and mailed to The History Project, 565 Boylston Street, Boston, MA, 02116. Once we hit our goal, any additional donations will be used to support The History Project's efforts to document, preserve, and share Boston's LGBTQ+ history.

Share this

Top Related Stories

#BlackHistoryMonth: Combahee River Collective

This Black History Month, The History Project is highlighting the stories, histories, and projects of Black [...]

This Black History Month, The History Project is highlighting the stories, histories, and projects of Black [...]

Hanky Panky: An Abridged History of the Hanky Code

The hanky code was a covert sartorial code used predominately by queer men in the 1970s [...]

The hanky code was a covert sartorial code used predominately by queer men in the 1970s [...]

Wikipedia Edit-a-thon: Queer Womxn of New England

BOSTON, MA (JANUARY 21, 2021) The History Project (THP), Boston’s LGBTQ community archives, is excited to [...]

BOSTON, MA (JANUARY 21, 2021) The History Project (THP), Boston’s LGBTQ community archives, is excited to [...]