LGBTQIA+ Pride Month

LGBTQIA+ Pioneers and Trailblazers

LGBTQIA+ Pride Month is celebrated in June to honor the 1969 Stonewall Uprising in Manhattan.In honor of National Pride Month, this month’s virtual display features the pioneers and trailblazers in support of the health of the LGBTQIA+ community. The virtual display offers helpful ebooks, journals, guidelines, and online resources.

LGBTQIA+ stands for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer and/or Questioning, Intersex, Asexual, and more. Although variations of the acronym are common, this is the most inclusive, and throughout the display. 

This display is part of the Leatherby Libraries’ Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion efforts in alignment with the Chapman University Strategic Plan for Diversity & Inclusion, fostering a diverse and inclusive campus climate.
 

Historical Figures and Trailblazers

Alan L. Hart,  MD (1890 - 1962) - Alan L. Hart, a physician and novelist named Lucille at birth but lived his life as a man. He was one of the first individuals to reassign his gender through surgical means, inspiring transsexual and transgender activists beginning in the late twentieth century. After attempting various forms of therapy without success, Hart asked his psychiatrist, Joshua Allen Gilbert, to help him obtain a hysterectomy and permanently adopt a male role. In 1917, Hart underwent surgery, changed his name, and married a schoolteacher, Inez Stark, who knew that Hart had been assigned female at birth. Hart started a medical practice in Oregon, but he was recognized by a former associate before long, forcing him to embark on a life of attempts to outrun his past by frequently relocating. Nevertheless, he built a successful medical career, obtained master’s degrees from the University of Pennsylvania and Yale University, and published a medical text on radiology and four novels. He and his second wife Edna moved to Connecticut in 1946, where, for the last 16 years of his life, he oversaw X-ray programs for the State Health Department until he died in 1962.
Devereaux E. Doctor Alan Hart. Australian Feminist Studies. 2010;25(64):175-187.


Ben Barres, MD, Ph.D. (1954 - 2017) - Ben Barres MD, Ph.D., was a neuroscientist and advocated for equal opportunity in science. Barres earned a bachelor’s degree from MIT, attended medical school at Dartmouth, and completed a residency in neurology at Weill Cornell Medical College. After growing frustrated with the inability to treat neurodegenerative disorders, he decided to refocus his career on research and entered the Ph.D. program at Harvard Medical School. At Harvard, Barres chose to focus on glia cells. As a neurologist examining degenerating brain tissue, he had been struck by the presence of reactive glia in close association with brain lesions, which got him interested in glia as potential players in disease. He later started his laboratory in the neurobiology department at Stanford University to further research glia cells. In his mid-40s, he transitioned from female to male and later became a beloved mentor to young scientists. Larry Summers, then president of Harvard, suggested that there was fewer female than male professors in science and engineering because women had intrinsically less aptitude. Barres wrote a landmark commentary in Nature explaining that bias, not intrinsic differences, led to this discrepancy. As a transgender male, Barres felt that his experiences living both as a woman and as a man allowed him to understand how the two genders were treated differently. He pulled from his own experiences and combined them with well-vetted studies to explain the power of bias. He was the first openly transgender scientist elected to the National Academy of Sciences.
Allen NJ, Daneman R. In Memoriam: Ben Barres. Journal of cell biology. 2018;217(2):435-438.


Bruce Raymond Voeller, Ph.D. (1934 - 1994) - Bruce Raymond Voeller, Ph.D., was a prominent figure in the fight for gay rights and a pioneer in AIDS research. He was widely recognized as one of the world's foremost authorities on homosexuality, the gay movement, and sex and AIDS research. He coined the term AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome) because of his firm belief that calling it a "gay"-related disease (GRID) was stigmatizing. After graduating Phi Beta Kappa from Reed College, Oregon, in 1956, Bruce won a coveted five-year fellowship to complete his doctorate in developmental biology, biochemistry, and developmental genetics at The Rockefeller University in New York City. He became the youngest person ever to achieve the rank of Associate Professor at Rockefeller. In 1980 Voeller created the Mariposa Education and Research Foundation in Topanga, Calif, to educate the public about human sexuality and conduct scientific research to reduce the risks of sexually transmitted diseases. Voeller’s studies included testing nonoxynol-9, the chief agent in many spermicides, for its ability to inactivate the human immunodeficiency virus.
McWhirter DP. Bruce Raymond Voeller, Ph.D. May 12, 1934 - February 13, 1994. The Journal of Sex Research. 1994;31(4):325-326.

Ethel Collins Dunham, MD (1883 - 1969) - Ethel Collins Dunham, MD, was a specialist in the care of premature infants. Dunham was a pioneer in neonatal medicine, helping to establish standards for the care of newborn infants. She found that prematurity was the most important cause of death among newborns and that high mortality rates could be reduced if sound standards were established. In 1935 Dunham moved to Washington, D.C., where Dunham became director of the division of research in child development at the Children's Bureau. Her work was published in 1943 as Standards and Recommendations for the Hospital Care of Newborn Infants, Full Term and Premature. An expanded version became one of the American Academy of Pediatrics most widely distributed publications. Ethel Dunham was the first woman to be awarded the Howland Medal, the American Pediatric Society highest award.
Sicherman B, Green CH, Kantrov I, et al., eds. Dunham, Ethel Collins. Notable American Woman, the Modern Period. Harvard University Press; 1980.


Martha May Eliot, MD (1891 - 1978) - Martha May Eliot, MD, was a pioneer in maternal and child health and a leading pediatrician. Eliot graduated from medical school at Johns Hopkins University in 1918. While a professor in the department of pediatrics at Yale University, Eliot also directed the National Children's Bureau Division of Child and Maternal Health. Her first critical research study of rickets in New Haven, Connecticut, and Puerto Rico explored issues at the heart of social medicine. During World War II, she administered the Emergency Maternity and Infant Care program, which provided maternity care for more than 1 million service members wives. She was one of the first women admitted into the American Pediatric Society and received the Howland Medal, the organization's top honor. In 1947, she became the first woman elected president of the American Public Health Association (APHA) and the first woman to receive APHA's, Sedgwick Memorial Medal. In 1964, APHA established the Martha May Eliot Award, an annual prize recognizing maternal and child health achievements.
Martha May Eliot, M.D. MMWR: Morbidity & Mortality Weekly Report. 1999;48(38):851. 


Dunham and Eliot had an intimate connection in their careers and personal lives. Eliot and Dunham met in 1910 during their undergraduate days and remained a couple until Dunham died in 1969. When Eliot graduated from college a year before her Dunham, she delayed entry to medical school by a year so they could enter Johns Hopkins together. Eliot graduated very high in her medical school class and was guaranteed an internship at Johns Hopkins. Still, when Dunham's application was rejected, Eliot opted instead for one in Boston, where she thought Dunham's prospects would be good. Even when Eliot took her first post in the U.S. Children's Bureau in 1924, she negotiated an arrangement that allowed her to work mainly from New Haven and spend only about one week a month in Washington, D.C. Only in 1935, when Eliot was promoted to assistant chief of the bureau and Dunham became the bureau's director of child development, did they move to the capital. Neither woman's obituary in the New York Times mentions their domestic partnership, but the opening line of Eliot's obituary offers an image that both describes their time and exalts their work: "An unmarried woman who devoted her life to problems of maternity and childcare."
Sicherman B, Green CH, Kantrov I, et al., eds. Dunham, Ethel Collins. Notable American Woman, the Modern Period. Harvard University Press; 1980.


Richard Isay, MD (1934 - 2012) - Richard Isay, MD, was a psychiatrist and activist who advanced a progressive view of gay men's development. He wrote publications that introduced fellow psychoanalysts and mental health clinicians to topics ranging from homosexual analysts to heterosexually married gay men. Isay campaigned against those sectors of institutional psychoanalysis that discriminated against LGB candidates and would-be training analysts. He served in a variety of leadership positions, including president of the Western New England Psychoanalytic Society; chair of the Committee on Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Issues of the American Psychiatric Association; vice president of the National Lesbian and Gay Health Association (NLGHA); and member of the board of the Hetrick-Martin Institute (HMI) for LGBT youth in Manhattan. Isay was a professor of psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College and a faculty member at the Columbia University Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research. Isay had not come out to himself until he was forty and had already married two children. After coming out to his colleagues, his colleagues ostracized him and stopped referring patients to him. He threatened a lawsuit in 1992 to force the APA to promise not to discriminate against gay people in training, hiring, or promotions. By 1997 the APA had endorsed marriage equality and was the first professional society to do so.
Kertzner R. In memoriam: Richard Isay (December 1934–June 2012). Journal of Gay & Lesbian Mental Health. 2013;17(1):127-128.


Sara Josephine Baker, MD, DrPH - Sara Josephine Baker, MD, DrPH, was a U.S. physician and public health administrator. She was also the first director of New York Bureau of Child Hygiene and an instrumental force in child and maternal health in the United States. A lesbian and a feminist, Baker was also a suffragist and a member of the Heterodoxy Club. She minimized her femininity by wearing masculine-tailored suits and joked that colleagues sometimes forgot she was a woman. Whether her sex was accounted for or set aside, it is doubtless that Baker faced gender discrimination and the same obstacles to a high-profile career that confronted women physicians throughout the medical profession in the early 20th century.  As President of the American Medical Women’s Association from 1935 to 1936, Baker had entered more strictly feminist activity.  Before American entry into World War I, she was a member of “the war brotherhood,” an organization that hoped to “keep doctors neutral.” Her work with poor mothers and children in immigrant communities had a dramatic impact on maternal and child mortality rates and became a model for cities across the country as well as the United States Children's Bureau, established in 1912
Parry MS. Sara Josephine Baker (1873-1945). American Journal of Public Health. 2006;96(4):620-621.

This page has paths:

This page references: