Henry Gerber Panel Discussion at Chicago History Museum

Join us at Chicago History Museum on Tuesday, December 10th, at 6 PM for a panel discussion celebrating 100 years since Henry Gerber founded the Society for Human Rights in 1924.

Many people believe that the fight for LGBTQIA+ rights in the United States began with the Stonewall Riots of 1969, but there is a much longer history of activism and community building in the pre-Stonewall era. Even before the earlier Homophile Movement of the 1950s and 1960s, sexual and gender minorities found creative ways to carve a space for themselves in a deeply oppressive society.

In 1924, Henry Gerber founded the Society for Human Rights, the first gay rights organization in the US, right here in Chicago. Inspired by the Homosexual Emancipation movement in Germany around the turn of the 20th century, the Society for Human Rights offered a small but critical source of connection between homosexual men long before the rise of the gay liberation movement or today’s modern LGBTQIA+ rights movement.

Join us to celebrate the centennial anniversary of this organization with a conversation about Henry Gerber’s life, the history of the early gay rights movement in the US, and the ongoing influence of the Society for Human Rights and Chicago’s central place in queer history.

Register and purchase tickets from Chicago History Museum Here – $8 for CHM members, $12 for non-members