Community

Partner Spotlight: The History Project

We sat down with our partner, The History Project

Pride Flag Fruitlands

LGBTQIA+ History Month is celebrated in October each year

What is the mission of The History Project?

The History Project documents, preserves, and shares LGBTQIA+ history. THP is an independent non-profit organization founded in 1980 that holds LGBTQIA+ historical records and ephemera, supports LGBTQIA+ history research, and shares LGBTQIA+ history through public exhibits and events. Our founders were archivists, activists, and historians who wanted to find and share LGBTQIA+ stories from throughout Massachusetts’ history, today we hold over 250 collections in our archives!

What are some recent accomplishments for The History Project?

This year, we’re celebrating the 20th anniversary of the first legal same-sex marriages in Massachusetts! Honey, Let’s Get Married! is a crowdsourced digital archive where anyone can share their marriage story. We’ve partnered with the Boston Public Library this fall to offer pop-up oral history interviews and to scan materials to be added to the Honey archives. Come visit us at our pop-ups – or at any of our upcoming events!

The Trustees Pride Float in 2024 rounds a corner on the parade route

The Trustees float in the 2024 Boston Pride for the People Parade

What is LGBTQIA+ History Month? Why is it celebrated? How does your work connect to this month?

LGBTQIA+ History Month takes place each October. It was created in 1994 to celebrate the history of the LGBTQIA+ community by sharing the stories of LGBTQIA+ ancestors and uplifting the stories of LGBTQIA+ role models. Most states still do not mandate that public education curriculum includes LGBTQIA+ history (some states even prohibit it), so it’s important to us to be able to share and show that we are part of a lineage of activists, artists, politicians, and everyday people who paved the way for modern LGBTQIA+ rights. LGBTQIA+ History Month is celebrated in October in honor of the National Marches on Washington for LGBTQIA+ rights (1979 and 1987). National Coming Out Day is also celebrated during LGBTQIA+ History Month on October 11th.

The History Project was created to ensure that LGBTQIA+ stories were uplifted and also available to anyone interested in our community’s history. The mission of The History Project and LGBTQIA+ History Month are very similar – although we spend all year celebrating and sharing LGBTQIA+ history.

A group from The Trustees poses in front of their 2024 pride parade float

The Trustees Pride ERG and allies at the 2024 Boston Pride for the People parade.

You gave a wonderful presentation to the Trustees Pride Employee Resource Group (ERG). Can you explain how you partner and work with local organizations like the Trustees?

We love partnering with local organizations! We work with local organizations in a few different ways. Sometimes we’re contacted for advice or guidance on how to interpret or share LGBTQIA+ stories at historic sites – it’s really amazing to see how many historic houses, museums, and other cultural heritage sites have included LGBTQIA+ people’s experiences in their interpretation, tours, and exhibits. LGBTQIA+ history was barely a field when we were founded in 1980 and the world has become so much more inclusive (and continues to become more inclusive!).

Another way we partner with local organizations is through events and programs – for example, our partnership with the Boston Public Library for Marriage Equality programming, or our 2023 series on the 50th Anniversary of Gay Community News with the Massachusetts Historical Society.

Finally, we also offer trainings and lectures exploring LGBTQIA+ history – that’s what I did with the Trustees Pride ERG last May. Together we dug into how we find LGBTQIA+ figures in history, talked about how language and labels have changed over time, and why we continue to document our community’s history. I had a lot of fun talking with the Pride ERG and beginning to brainstorm how to include more LGBTQIA+ inclusive history at the Trustees’ properties.

What is your favorite part of Massachusetts’ LGBTQIA+ History?

Massachusetts has had a lot of political firsts! We were the first state to legalize same-sex marriage (2004), elect an out LGBTQIA+ politician to state office (Elaine Nobel, 1974), and elect an openly lesbian governor (Maura Healey, 2022 – although she shares the honor with Tina Kotek of Oregon).

There are tons of stories of LGBTQIA+ Bostonians (we have a book called Improper Bostonians that tells some of these stories). My favorite “Improper Bostonians” are the women who lived together in “Boston Marriages.” Fifty women’s colleges opened between 1836 and 1875, giving women unprecedented access to education and independence. Some chose not to marry, instead forming lifelong partnerships known as Boston Marriages, a term popularized by Henry James in The Bostonians (1886). He was inspired by his sister Alice James and her relationship with Katharine Loring.

One well-known Boston Marriage was between Katherine Lee Bates, author of America the Beautiful, and Katharine Coman, historian. Both women taught at Wellesley College and were in a relationship together for 25 years.

Anything else you’d like to share?

If you ever have an LGBTQIA+ history question – please feel free to reach out to us at info@historyproject.org. Even if we don’t have the answer in the archives, we’re happy to point you in the right direction.

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