Independence Mall

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

“This dignified protest, which startled many a citizen into fresh thought about the meaning of Independence Day, might well have been applauded by our Founding Fathers, who were intent on making America safe for the differences.”

— Kay “Tobin” Lahusen in , September, 1965.

Before Stonewall, there was “Annual Reminder Day.” On July 4th, 1965, the first of what was to become five annual demonstrations for gay rights occurred in front of Independence Hall in Philadelphia. They were called “Annual Reminder Day" demonstrations, to "remind the American public that homosexuals did not enjoy many of the rights that were protected in our Constitution." Each year, 40-120 lesbians and gay men from Washington D.C. (including Frank Kameny), New York, and Philadelphia courageously picketed for equality, in an era when they risked their jobs, their families and their lives by doing so. The demonstrators chose Independence Hall for their demonstrations because of its long history as a place where grievances were aired and where political discourse was welcome.

History

Before the June 1969 Stonewall uprising for gay rights in New York City, and before annual pride marches in cities across the country, there was “Annual Reminder Day” in Philadelphia. On July 4th, 1965, the first of what was to become five annual demonstrations for gay and lesbian rights occurred in front of Independence Hall, where the Declaration of Independence and the United States Constitution were created. They were called “Annual Reminder Day" demonstrations, to "remind the American public that homosexuals did not enjoy many of the rights that were protected in the Constitution." Each year, 40-120 lesbian women and gay men from Washington, D.C., New York, and Philadelphia courageously picketed for equality in federal employment, in an era when they risked their jobs, their families, and their lives by doing so. The demonstrators chose this historic location for their demonstrations because of its long history as a place to air grievances and where political discourse was welcome. At the time of the first pickets, the demonstration site was called Independence Mall State Park, which was realized between 1950 and 1967. The site was transferred to the National Park Service in 1974, renamed, and incorporated into Independence National Historical Park in 1997.

Independence Mall – Precursor to Stonewall

In the mid-1960s, homosexuality was still labeled by the American Psychiatric Association (APA) as a mental illness, and being a homosexual could lead to job loss, social ostracism, discrimination, and even violence; gays and lesbians couldn’t get married or be in the military. Remarkably, on July 4, 1965, the first of five annual demonstrations organized by the East Coast Homophile Organizations (ECHO) – comprised of the New York Chapter of the Daughters of Bilitis, the Janus Society in Philadelphia, and the Mattachine Society of Washington, D.C. and New York – was held in front of Philadelphia’s Independence Hall, the symbolic birthplace of the nation and American Democracy.

Image 1 Alt Text North Side of Independence Hall, circa 1850. Courtesy Library of Congress.

The Annual Reminder Day was conceived by Craig Rodwell following a picket at the White House three months earlier and featured: Frank Kameny, a Boston-born Washingtonian who had a master’s and doctorate degrees from Harvard in astronomy and had been fired from the U.S. Army in 1957 and permanently banned from federal employment for being gay – he was also founder of the D.C. Chapter of the N.Y.-based Mattachine Society; and Barbara Gittings, who founded the New York Chapter of the San Francisco-based Daughters for Bilitis (DOB) and was editor of the organization’s magazine, .

Kameny and Gittings had met two years earlier at an ECHO conference where Kameny spoke out against the APA’s designation of homosexuality as a mental illness and the idea that it was a disorder that could be cured. According to The Purloined Ladder: Its Place in Lesbian History, Gittings said: "My thinking didn't change until Frank Kameny came along and he said plainly and firmly and unequivocally that homosexuality is no kind of sickness or disease or disorder or malfunction, it is fully on par with heterosexuality ... Suddenly I found that I was looking at things that had happened in the past in a very different light and I was taking a position that was increasingly diverging from DOB's positions" (the APA formally reversed its position on December 15, 1973, in part due to the unrelenting advocacy by Kameny and Gittings).

Image 1 Alt Text Cover and Article about First Annual Reminder Demonstration in The Ladder, September 1965, Vol. 9. No. 12. Courtesy The UC Berkeley Library.

Kameny and Gittings sought to convey the reality that lesbians and gays were like everyone else, so they had a dress code for the demonstrators, conservative business attire widely adopted at the time. The pamphlets they handed out were couched in the same rhetoric about the struggle for life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness that America's founders had used. The demonstrations took place after the conclusion of Philadelphia’s annual July 4th parade, with demonstrators walking quietly and peacefully and carrying signs advocating for equal treatment as seen in the short documentary film “The Second Largest Minority,” which features the 1968 march. Kameny can be heard saying “We are homosexual human beings and homosexual American citizens. Everybody always remembers the first word in both of those phrases, homosexual, and conveniently overlooks the second and third word in each of those phrases, American citizens and human beings.”

At the time of the first demonstration, Independence Mall was nearing completion. The block closest to the Hall had been completed in 1954 and featured a central lawn flanked by walks, bosques, and terraces with a planting plan designed by Wheelwright, Stevenson & Langran. Landscape architect Dan Kiley's 1963 plan for the northernmost block represented Philadelphia's five original squares with five fountains and included a gridded bosque of 700 honey locust trees.

Image 1 Alt Text Dan Kiley Designed Northern Block of Independence Mall circa 1983 by David C. Elkinton. Courtesy National Park Service.

The last of these peaceful pickets, all mounted with permits from the National Park Service, took place in 1969 only days after the Stonewall riots. Several of the Stonewall demonstrators participated; Kameny made an exception to the dress code for them. It was decided that fall in Philadelphia to move the demonstrations to New York the next year, for what would become America's first gay pride parade.

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Photo by Sahar Coston-Hardy, 2024.

Visibility

These demonstrations were deliberately staged in front of Independence Hall, the symbolic birthplace of the United States, where the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution had both been created. In 1997 Olin Partnership (now OLIN) produced a new master plan for the entire mall, with structures on the west side, smaller parks with shade trees on the east, and straight brick paths that extend the original street grid as pedestrian walkways. These changes dramatically altered the view of the mall looking northern from the site of the Annual Reminder Day protests.

The Annual Reminders are now interpreted with a Pennsylvania State Historical Marker (2005) located across from the mall on Chestnut Street and the Liberty Bell Center features interpretation highlighting the legacy of the demonstrations. Since 2015, the 50th anniversary of the first Annual Reminder Day, Independence National Historical Park (INHP) has hosted public programs about these demonstrations every July 4th. Additionally, in 2018 the park’s Liberty Bell Center featured an , funded through the National Park Service LGBTQ Heritage Initiative, highlighting the legacy of the demonstrations.

While the National Park Service maintains a website that includes information such as , the website for INHP does not currently incorporate the Annual Reminder Day history into the educational information made available.

There are archives for the two organizers of the Annual Reminder Day: the at the Library of Congress, which includes an oral history with Kameny; and the at the New York Public Library.

What You Can Do to Help

Independence National Historical Park was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1988. There is an opportunity to update the nomination to expand the period of significance (defined as 1774-1824) to include the Annual Reminder Day protests.

Contact Lauren Gurniewicz, Chief of Interpretation and Education for Philadelphia’s National Park Service sites, to advocate for updating the National Register of Historic Places nomination to expand the period of significance; recommend that Independence National Historical Park document historic trees that witnessed the Annual Reminder pickets to add to the (HALS) database at the National Park Service; and incorporate information included on the National Park Service’s website on the INHP website.

Lauren Gurniewicz, Chief of Interpretation and Education
National Park Service
143 S. 3rd Street, Philadelphia, PA 19106
T: 215-965-2305
E: Lauren_Gurniewicz@nps.gov

Lesbian and gay history is often marginalized, forgotten, or deliberately erased. Ensuring that these stories are told and retold and that these voices are amplified and included in conversations keeps these hidden histories alive.

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  • Photo by Sahar Coston-Hardy, 2024.