PlanetOut
 Search
 Opinion
 Queer History
 Week in Review
 Coming Out
 Best of 2007
 

The Lesbian Herstory Archives

Also on PlanetOut:

  • An interview with Joan Nestle
  • More on queer archives
  • More PlanetOut history

    Interact

  • Queer History message board


  • Tucked away in an unassuming three-story brownstone on a quiet, tree-lined street in Brooklyn, the Lesbian Herstory Archives is a shining example of just how far our community has come. Founded in 1973 by Joan Nestle and Deb Edel, it is the oldest and largest lesbian archives in the world.

    The Archives began in the tiny pantry of Joan Nestle's Upper West Side apartment, where, she recalls, the first bookshelves were held together with coffee cans. Over the years, the Archives have grown tremendously. They are what Joan calls "a 25-year-old miracle of grassroots envisioning."

    Set upon creating a queer history for the lesbian community, Joan and Deb put the Archives on the map through word of mouth and a traveling slide show. As they made their way from living room to community center, they collected personal papers, poetry, and photographs from women across the country. The result, 25 years later, is over a dozen collections, hundreds of files and papers, and an environment that makes you feel like you've come home.

    For nearly 20 years, when you visited the Archives, you really did go home -- to Joan's home, that is. "Well, they had to be here," she says. "I had the largest apartment!" But when Joan turned 50, she decided it was time for the Archives to move. So, in LHA tradition, the 20-plus volunteer "co-coordinators" who run the Archives on a yearly basis went to the community for support. In no time at all, through fundraisers and gatherings, the Archives raised enough for a down payment on its new home.

    When you enter the Archives today the first thing you will notice is the foyer full of photographs. Here you can see Audre Lorde as a young girl, an unidentified couple on a New York City beach in the 1950s, and a woman named Annie Lee Grant, who lived and passed as a man for 15 years. These are only a few of the women -- famous and not so famous -- who line the walls.

    Redesigned by lesbian carpenters and architects, the first floor is dedicated to the reference, book & monographs, audiovisual, and graphic/poster collections. If you work your way up the stairs to the second floor you'll find the special collections, which house everything from newsletters from around the world to diary entries to unpublished and personal papers. Here you will also find the periodical, newsletter, and international collection. But a true must-see, and a great place to commune with the past, is the button and clothing collection.

    In grassroots tradition, the Archives do not accept grants from the federal government. Joy Rich, the volunteer co-coordinator who led me through the Archives, says, "We're grassroots and we feel that we're a safe place for people to send their papers and memories." This is in reaction to the universities and libraries which would once have deemed it unthinkable to house gay and lesbian collections but now seek them out.

    For Joan, that change is a source of both pain and redemption. As a high school student, she went to the New York City Public Library at 42nd Street to attempt to write a research paper on homosexuality. What she found in the card catalog was so shocking that she never wrote it. Under "Homosexuality," it read, "see Deviancy," and "Pathology," with further references to mental institutions. So it's ironic that when the New York City Public Library opened its first gay and lesbian exhibit a few years ago, it called upon the Archives for contributions. If you flip through the subject files on the first floor of the Archives and happen to come upon "Deviancy," you will now find "see History."

    To contact the Archives:

    The Lesbian Herstory Archives LHEF, Inc.
    P.O. Box 1258
    New York, NY 10116

    To visit the Archives by appointment or to find out hours, call:
    (718) 768-DYKE (3953)
    Fax: (718) 768-4663
    www.datalounge.net/lha



     
    Company Info | Advertise on PNO | Frequently Asked Questions
    Privacy Policy | User Agreement | Community Guidelines
    PNO Affiliate Program | Letter to the Editor
    © 1995-2008 PlanetOut Inc | Legal Notice


    Login Now
    Member Name:
    Password:
    Save name and password
    Forgot login/password?
    PlanetOut Direct
    News to You
    Get PlanetOut News headlines mailed directly to you now!