overview

A peaceful Times Square protest over recent increased police harassment against the LGBT community in the Greenwich Village and Times Square neighborhoods, on Saturday night, August 29, 1970, was followed by a riot between the police and protestors in Greenwich Village.

It demonstrated the volatile atmosphere that still existed between the community and police over a year after the Stonewall Uprising.

Header Photo
Credit: Amanda Davis/NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project, 2020.

History

On Saturday night, August 29, 1970, over 700 members of the Gay Activists Alliance (GAA) and Gay Liberation Front (GLF), along with Radicalesbians and other women’s groups and Gay Youth, held a peaceful joint protest in Times Square calling for the immediate end of police harassment against the LGBT community. Some 300 LGBT individuals had recently been arrested on a variety of charges in a “clean-up” of the area that month alone, and there were increased incidents in Greenwich Village as well. GAA leaflets accused the police of illegal arrests, verbal harassment, and physical brutality against the community; official support of such activities by politicians; silence by the public; and negligence by the press in covering these issues. GLF’s leaflets were more pointed: “The time for gays to take matters into their own hands is now .… We will be oppressed as long as we do not have the power to fight back.”

After marching three times around West 42nd Street, between Eighth Avenue and Broadway, the crowd headed to the 14th Police Precinct Station House at 357 West 35th Street, where those arrested in the Times Square area were taken. The march continued down Seventh Avenue towards Greenwich Village, when word spread to target the controversial Women’s House of Detention, at Sixth Avenue and Christopher Street. At this point, GAA folded its banner and its members began to disperse. However, around midnight the Saturday night denizens of the Village swelled the crowd to around 1,000 people, with shouts of “Gay Power” and “End Police Harassment.”

Moving to Sheridan Square, protesters found that police were right then raiding the Haven nightclub at 1 Sheridan Square, and the police suddenly attacked the crowd. GLF members regrouped and marched back to the Women’s House of Detention, calling for its abolition. Women inside were incited to respond, shouting through the windows and throwing burning objects down to the street. Police arrived to respond to those inside and outside the prison, and a riot began that lasted for several hours. Bottles were thrown at the police — who attacked the crowd — fires were started, two cars were overturned, and some nearby storefront windows were smashed. Twelve people were arrested, and several police officers and others were reported injured.

The following Sunday night, beginning around 10:30 p.m., a spontaneous march took place through the Village, and another six people were arrested. GAA, taking a non-violent position, renewed its demand for an immediate end to police harassment, which would quell the explosive climate within the LGBT community.

Read about other GAA actions, listed in chronological order, in our curated theme.

Entry by Jay Shockley, project director (August 2020).

NOTE: Names above in bold indicate LGBT people.

Sources

  1. Arnie Kantrowitz, Gay Activists Alliance Meeting Minutes, September 3, 1970.

  2. Arnie Kantrowitz, Under the Rainbow: Growing Up Gay (New York: Pocket Books, 1977).

  3. Arthur Bell, Dancing the Gay Lib Blues: A Year in the Homosexual Liberation Movement (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1971), 96-101.

  4. C. Gerald Fraser, “’Gay Ghettoes’ Seen as Police Targets,” The New York Times, August 30, 1970, 28.

  5. Frank J. Prial, “Protest March by Homosexuals Sparks Disturbance in ‘Village’,” The New York Times, August 30, 1970, 49.

  6. Martha Shelley, “Gays Riot Again!,” Come Out!, September-October 1970, 3.

  7. “New Gay Riots Erupt in Greenwich Village,” GAY, September 21, 1970, 1, 16.

  8. “We’re Fighting Back!,” Gay Flames, September 1, 1970.

  9. Will Kohler, “Gay History – August 1970: The Gay Activist Alliance and Gay Liberation Front Battle the NYPD in the ‘Forgotten Riot’,” Back2Stonewall, August 1, 2019, bit.ly/39pipzC.

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Curated Themes

20 Sites

Gay Activists Alliance

12 Sites

Why We March

20 Sites

Homophobia & Transphobia

Other Sites in the Neighborhood

302 West 45th Street
Al Hirschfeld Theater (originally Martin Beck Theater)
Performance Venues