Showing Collections: 11 - 20 of 35
Lesbian Legacy Collection subject files
Los Angeles Committee to Free Sharon Kowalski records
Los Angeles Public Library and Langston Hughes Poster Complaint Collection
Molly McKay and Davina Kotulski marriage scrapbooks
Scrapbooks assembled by Molly B. McKay documenting her and Davina S. Kotulski’s experience as the “poster couple” for marriage equality rights in California, 1998-2012. This collection consists of portable document formats (PDFs) of the pages of McKay’s 22 scrapbooks of clippings, correspondence, organizational materials, and photographs relevant to the couple’s activism.
National New Orleans Memorial Fund Collection
Financial statements, medical service receipts, correspondence, articles, flyers, eulogy texts, clippings, photograph, donation records and other material from the National New Orleans Memorial Fund (NNOMF), 1973-1974. The NNOMF was established in Los Angeles in 1973 to provide medical assistance and other support for victims of a fire that killed 32 patrons of a bar popular with the New Orleans gay and lesbian community.
National Organization of Gay and Lesbian Scientists and Technical Professionals (NOGLSTP) records
National Organization of Lesbians and Gays Records
New Alliance for Gay Equality (New AGE) Records
Elaine Noble election campaign collection
Brochures, pamphlets, campaign administrative records, newspaper clippings, a campaign scrapbook, materials from opponents' campaigns, correspondence, ephemera, flyers, mock-ups for campaign papers, two issues of "The Noble News," press releases, and stationery, 1974-1976, pertaining to Elaine Noble's 1974 democratic campaign for the Massachusetts House of Representatives. Noble was the first openly gay or lesbian political candidate elected to a state office.
Karen Ocamb photographs
Karen Ocamb photographs include an undated group picture of Jim Kepner, Harry Hay, Morris Knight, Muetler(?), Jackie Goldberg, and Virginia Uribe; the New York Dyke March, June 1994; Jeanne Cristina with child Hannah at the 1993 March on Washington; and an unidentified gay event at New York Central Park.