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What Was the Labouchere Amendment?

by Wik Wikholm


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  • Playwright Oscar Wilde spent two years in prison at hard labor; computer scientist Alan Turing endured forced estrogen injections; and thousands of other British citizens were tormented -- all because of the Labouchere Amendment.

    On August 6, 1885, as the House of Commons was considering raising the age of consent for heterosexual intercourse, Member of Parliament Henry Labouchere proposed a law that would, for the first time, make any form of sex between men a crime. Anal sex had been illegal, but Labouchere's amendment extended punishment to "any act of gross indecency" in public or in private. The Attorney General insisted that the sentence be two years at hard labor; Labouchere agreed and the bill passed.

    The amendment victimized thousands, but Henry Labouchere was an unlikely villain. Though he was born a banking heir, Labouchere considered himself a rebel against Great Britain's class system. Before his election to the House of Commons, Labouchere earned a reputation as a fearless journalist and an enemy of the establishment. He often used his pen to irritate his two favorite enemies, the aristocracy and the royal family. Labouchere believed that Britain's House of Lords, composed of titled aristocrats and Anglican Bishops, should be abolished in favor of an elected body, and he often complained that Queen Victoria and her family cost the nation more money than they were worth. Once elected, Labouchere championed the interests of the working classes.

    Today, Labouchere's law seems like a stain on an otherwise unblemished liberal record, but in 1880s England the law seemed progressive. The amendment was attached to the Criminal Law Amendment Act, a law that was drafted under pressure from Social Purity feminists who were outraged about a double standard that had developed in England. Prostitution was tolerated by the middle class, but concerns about the spread of syphilis moved Parliament to pass a law to contain the disease. The law allowed officials to pick up women and force them to submit to medical examinations just because they looked like prostitutes. In some towns, any working-class woman was at risk.

    Diseased or not, men escaped these humiliations, an inequity that infuriated the Social Purity movement. The feminists believed it was wrong to blame fallen women for prostitution and venereal disease. The real culprit was male lust, a force they found so powerful that they demanded enforcement of a strict moral code to contain it. A man who yielded to his animal passions was a danger to society. Lust threatened to force more girls into prostitution and to destroy families when husbands brought syphilis home, and any threat to the family was a threat to the health of the nation.

    A law against male-male sex seems odd in retrospect, but it made sense to the feminists. Sex between men, still the "crime not to be named among Christians," seemed the supreme expression of sexual lust unleashed. According to the feminists, a man who could commit an act as abhorrent as gross indecency had foresworn the most basic restraints of civilized Christian morality. Such a morally deranged man seemed likely to also sexually abuse girls and women and was best locked away to protect the innocent from his predations.

    The Labouchere amendment remained on Britain's law books unchanged for more than 80 years. A Parliamentary committee studying homosexuality challenged the law in 1957, but gay Englishmen had to wait until 1967 for their sex lives to become legal. Today the age of consent for heterosexual sex (16) is still lower than that for gay sex (18).

    Further Reading:

    Hyde, H. Montgomery. The Other Love: An Historical and Contemporary Survey of Homosexuality in Britain. 1970. London: Heinemann.

    Lesbian and Gay Staff Association, South Bank University. Knitting Circle Law Centre."

    Pearson, Hesketh. Labby: The Life and Character of Henry Labouchere. 1937. New York: Harper.

    Weeks, Jeffrey. Coming Out: Homosexual Politics in Britain From the Nineteenth Century to the Present. 1990. London: Quartet.


    Wik Wikholm produces www.gayhistory.com, an introduction to modern gay history. He can be reached on the site's discussion boards, or by e-mail at wik@gayhistory.com.




     
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