杏吧视频 historian John Grabowski and three university students created a history of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community in Cleveland in a new exhibit at the Western Reserve Historical Society (WRHS).
The exhibit, 鈥淭he Victory of Self: The LGBT Community in Northeast Ohio,鈥漮pen now, coincides with the 2014 Gay Games in Cleveland, Aug. 9-16. The historical society is at 10825 East Blvd. in Cleveland.
Grabowski and the students compiled the history from 100 boxes of letters, banners, posters and other memorabilia from 20 collections donated to the museum by members of the local LGBT community.
鈥淥ur hope is that the participants of the Gay Games 9 will come out to University Circle and learn about the history of the movement in Cleveland while they are in town,鈥 Grabowski said.
Normally, students from the experiential learning course, 鈥淗istory Museums: Theory and Reality,鈥 assist with research for projects already begun at WRHS.
But Grabowski, the WRHS senior vice president of research and publications and CWRU鈥檚 Krieger Mueller Associate Professor of Applied History, surprised second-year students Daliah Greenwald and Quinn Winters and third-year student Erin Law with the assignment to create an exhibit.
With a few ideas for the exhibit to set the project in motion, Grabowski sent them off to the archives to find information that reflected Cleveland鈥檚 LGBT history, from when the community was mainly underground to its more public 鈥渃oming out鈥 since the 1960s.
鈥淲e got to take it from there,鈥 said Law, a history major from Vincent, Ohio.
The challenge sent the treasure-hunters searching WRHS鈥檚 archive stacks and storage areas. Greenwald found a Frisbee given away by the Gay People鈥檚 Chronicle at the 1993 Pride Parade and other ephemera.
鈥淭his was a dream come true to experience learning about how a museum works and handling historic artifacts,鈥 said Winters, a political science major from Saratoga, Calif.
Among the artifacts Quinn found were unpublished emails from people who provided a personal view of life in Cleveland鈥檚 LGBT community. 鈥淚t was like you were reading an autobiography of someone鈥檚 life,鈥 he said.
Greenwald and Law found the messages they read made people came alive, too, and created a desire to meet the writers.
The information also shaped their perceptions. Winters, who is from the San Francisco area, always thought of New York City and San Francisco as leaders in the gay movement. He learned that Cleveland was on the forefront long before those and other urban areas.
Among Law鈥檚 favorite artifacts were a 鈥測ellow pages鈥 that served the gay and lesbian community. Posters and other materials in the archives formed a picture of a subculture that few probably knew existed or realized how large it was, she said.
鈥淭his was a unique opportunity to be there at the beginning of the exhibit and see it go up,鈥 said Greenwald, a history major from Syracuse, N.Y.
Her search through the boxes yielded several colored posters and a photo mask of late playwright and local gay activist Aubrey Wertheim. Greenwald organized the printed material in the LGBT鈥檚 symbolic colored rainbow on the wall with the mask at the center.
Because the students had chosen more artifacts than available exhibit space, they had to make tough calls about what to keep and what to cut.
Once decided, they prepared the items for show. Fragile paper posters or flyers were duplicated at the Kelvin Smith Library and returned to WRHS for dry mounting鈥攁 skill they also learned. They also had to paint exhibit cases, and arranged the material for display with a museum exhibit designer.
For more information about the exhibit and WRHS, visit .
CWRU students create historical society exhibit on LGBT history in Cleveland
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August 12, 2014
STORY BY: EDITORIAL STAFF
STORY BY: EDITORIAL STAFF