UPCOMING EVENT

Bronx History and Activism Project: LGBTQ+ History

October 17, 2024 | 3:00pm - 4:00pm

Virtual Event

Bronx History and Activism Project event flierFor LGBT History Month, project manager Amanda Davis will be giving a virtual talk to the New York Public Library’s Soundview branch in the Bronx focusing on LGBT history in the borough.

This program is made possible by NYPL’s Innovation Lab, which pilots new staff ideas for reaching and engaging our communities.

To learn more and register, click here.

PAST EVENT

Research Workshop | Uncovering Queer History at the Library of Virginia

September 28, 2024 | 2:30pm - 4:30pm

Library of Virginia, Computer Classroom
800 East Broad Street, Richmond, VA
View on Google Maps

As part of the project’s outreach efforts, project manager Amanda Davis will be presenting at this program in Richmond, VA.

Research Workshop | Uncovering Queer History imageWhen researching previously hidden history, knowing where to start can be difficult. Join us for a workshop to learn strategies for conducting research related to Queer history.

Guest presenters Blake McDonald, grants and survey specialist at the Virginia Department of Historic Resources and coordinator of DHR’s LGBTQ+ heritage initiative, and Amanda Davis, project manager with the NYC LGBTQ Historic Sites Project, will discuss their work documenting and uncovering queer history and queer spaces and share their approach to queer research, including resources and tips for overcoming obstacles. Library of Virginia staff members will also present information on collection resources available for learning more about Queer history. Participants will have time to ask questions concerning their own research and browse identified resources.

For more information, contact Mary Ann Mason at [email protected] or 804.692.3648.

This event is free and open to the public. Registration is required. Limited free parking is available underneath the Library at 800 East Broad Street.

To learn more and register, click here.

James Baldwin 100

August 2, 2024

Happy birthday, James Baldwin! August 2nd marks 100 years since the birth of the author and activist. For this special occassion, we’re visiting five NYC sites connected to Baldwin’s enduring legacy.

James Baldwin Residence, 81 Horatio Street — Baldwin lived at 81 Horatio Street from 1958 to 1961, and it’s where he continued working on his third novel, Another Country, which included bisexual characters. (read more)

 

135th Street Branch of the New York Public Library — Growing up in Harlem, Baldwin was profoundly influenced by the 135th Street Branch of the New York Public Library, dedicated to Black literature, once saying he read “every single book” here. (read more)

 

SCHOMBURG CENTER FOR RESEARCH IN BLACK CULTURE, 515 Malcolm X Boulevard — This institution houses one of the country’s most significant collections of African American history and the African Diaspora, including the records of LGBT notables and groups including James Baldwin. (read more)

NOW ON VIEW at the Schomburg:
“JIMMY! God’s Black Revolutionary Mouth.”

 

The San Remo, 189 Bleecker Street — In 1943, Baldwin moved downtown to Greenwich Village and frequented hangouts like the San Remo, popular with Bohemians, Beats, and gay people — though he also wrote about the racism he experienced here. (read more)

 

National Headquarters for the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, 170 West 130th Street — Baldwin’s civil rights activism brought him back to Harlem in 1963. He met with those planning and preparing for the iconic March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in D.C. at its National Headquarters. (read more)

 

James Baldwin Residence, 137 West 71st Street — Baldwin owned 137 West 71st Street on the Upper West Side from 1965 until his death in 1987. During that period, he wrote about his own sexuality for the first time in his 1985 essay, “Here Be Dragons,” also published as “Freaks and the American Ideal of Manhood.” (read more)