Tuesday, June 11, 2024

COMPTONS

When we talk gay Pride and gay history, it sometimes amazes me how it's not mentioned very much about the Compton Cafeteria Riots that happened several years before and most likely led the way for the Stonewall Riots,  and again led by trans women and drag queens. The queens had finally had enough! Almost 58 years ago this coming August, transgender and drag queens and gender- nonconforming customers at Gene Compton's Cafeteria stood up to years of abusive, discriminatory treatment by the San Franisco police. The all-night restaurant in the city's impoverished Tenderloin neighborhood was an unwilling haven for queer residents, and after its management called police to remove a noisy table of diners, patrons frustrated with the constant profiling and harassment, started throwing plates, glasses, trays, silverware and fist at the officers. While police waited for back up, customers tore the cafeteria apart, and the riot spread onto the nearby streets of Turk and Taylor, damaging police cars, smashing windows and burning a newspaper stand to the ground.

Three years before the Stonewall Riots in New York City, which most Americans consider the watershed moment for gay rights, transgender citizens of San Fran took to the streets to demand better treatment and to hold their harassers accountable. Although the conflict at Compton's was mostly ignored by the media, including our own publications run by the gay community, 1966 would prove a major turning point in the battle for transgender civil rights, a year when cultural shifts aligned to begin improving the Trans community's access to healthcare and its relationship with law enforcement. I know some people don't get the destruction of property and such. But when a part of tribe in my opinion is ignored, treated like dirt, can't have rights, and be treated just like everybody else, there comes a point it's time to burn the village to get people to see how far they have pushed us. There comes a breaking point when enough is enough.

Donna Personna was one that was not going to take it anymore, having been at Comptons, and faced discriminations from clubs and bars... and proud to say she is still with us at 78. Donna Personna does not want to be tolerated.  I read in a book, where she said, she is to be loved, adored and respected, and has no patience for anyone's tolerance. She says Fuck that shit...Just gives us our rights. I couldn't agree more.  And her Pride mantra always has been, "It' ain't no party. It's time to act up." We have to remember what happened more then 50 years ago to the transgender, the ones that taught her how to live and fight back if need be. Donna is a huge transgender rights activist these days and a fine artist who focuses in on photography, painting and mixed media. She also co-wrote a play about the Compton Cafeteria Riot and added much content into a documentary about the riot. Since then, she raised San Francisco's first transgender flag at City Hall with Mayor London Breed and in 2019 was the Grand Marshall of the Pride Parade. 

I can't help but when at a Pride think of all the ones involved in all the riots and the activist before us. I still get chills when in New York for Pride and have drinks at the Stonewall. I feel it's only right to take a moment of peace to feel the place and remember what went on in these places. Which is why it's important we keep being seen at these Pride Parades and festivals. We stay in our homes; people will think we don't care about our rights, or we are not good enough for them. Sure, the festivities, frivolity and comradery and the drinks can be fun, but let's also remember and give an ode to the real reason we are there...to celebrate where we came from, and to keep a good, spirited fight going. 

Happy Gay Pride🏳‍🌈

27 comments:

  1. very interesting. I'd never heard of it.

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    1. See. Another who never heard of it. If one person learns about this...it's been worth it.

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  2. One of our stories that mustn't be forgotten.
    Thanks for sharing this again. 🏳‍🌈🏳‍🌈🏳‍🌈

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  3. And in 1959--ten years before Stonewall--there was the Cooper's Do-nuts riot in Los Angeles, again started by drag queens. It's been surmised that the reason Stonewall got so much more attention than the earlier gay riots is because of all of the writers living in Greenwich Village at the time.

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    1. That makes sense too Kirk. Not to mention the death of Judy at the time. Queens were besides themselves then. Still a shame that our own gay publications didn't write about these riots. Shame on us. Thanks heavens we still have the like of Donna to tell and record these things.

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  4. I have never heard of it but thank goodness for those brave, determined people!
    Happy pride to us all!😁

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  5. Thanks for telling the Compton’s story. It’s amazing how little awareness there is of this major event in our history. Our heroes!

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  6. Good job reporting sweetie, better than any of the local papers did at the time of the riot. They didn't even bother mentioning it.

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    1. It was surprising it wasn't even reported by our own papers. To think it took research on something else for me to find out about it in the early 2000's... and then when I mentioned it, people looked at me like Im nuts.

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  7. Yay Donna Personna, fierce and proud! And thanks for the history of the Compton Riots!

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  8. Reading her comments reminded me of Anne Marie.

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    1. Those two would have been thick as thieves.

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  9. Thank you for sharing all this. A wonderful slice of gay history! Gay history is real history and should be taught! You'd make quite a teacher, I bet. Standing in front of a chalkboard full of info indicating what the class should pay attention to with your pointy stick... :P

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    1. If you're in the front row, just bring your protective eyewear.....

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  10. It's always important to remember those things - the struggle. Pride has got to put History back into the celebration of emancipation. That's what the month really should focus on betwixt and between the frivolity.

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    1. Your right....we can have fun while still learning and remembering the real purpose and our history. I think many don't even think of the past hero's and activist.

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  11. Whoa.
    Thanks for posting this, Mads! And of course it was the Queens and the Trans Women who started the protest. The White Banana Republic gays only wanted to keep sucking dick in dirty restrooms and never disturbed the status quo.
    I immediately went to Wiki to find out more about Donna. What a life!

    XOXO

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    1. Ohhhhhhhh Donna Personna is quite a character. If you ever get a chance to watch Screaming Queens......

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  12. Thanks for sharing this once again. We tend to forget history when no one reports it.

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  13. Thank you for posting this, sweetpea! I didn't know about Compton's. Also, thank you, Kirk, for the info about what happened here in LA back in 1959 at Cooper's Donuts. I was 9 years old at the time, but now I know a bit more about Los Angeles history. xoxo

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    1. I love the comments and banter. Look what we are all learning today!!!!!

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  14. Anonymous6/12/2024

    Screaming Queens is a great documentary about Compton’s and the Tenderloin. You can watch the doc on YouTube. -Rj

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    1. I have seen it and it's great. Thanks for commenting it is on You Tube....I didn't know that.

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  15. Wow - what a survivor!

    I was aware that the much-over-hyped Stonewall Riots were not the first such action - civil or uncivil - in the US or elsewhere, but as various people have quite rightly observed, gays, lesbians, drag queens and others were only ever featured in newspapers in the most hateful, discriminatory, bigoted manner - even up until the 1990s - it's unsurprising that the only gay history that's ever charted is in hindsight, thanks to tenacious researchers who seek out these individual witnesses and participants, and preserve their memories for posterity.

    I applaud wholeheartedly every pioneer, every pissed-off queen, dyke or tranny who punched a policeman who was harassing them, every individual who finally just said "no!", and fought back in whatever way they could - by rioting, by petitioning, by lobbying, or by just being "out there". We stand on the shoulders of giants! Jx

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    1. Here!!!! Here!!!!! Jon!!!!! That's right honey!!!!! I applaud your last paragraph...and our LGBTQ is so much better with you in it!!!!!!

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  16. Bob's comment on his blog about heterosexuals having unnecessary support is too true. It is the minorities who need protecting from the majority and the poor who need protection from the depredations of the rich.

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Go ahead darling, tell me something fabulous!