The Ladder (magazine)

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'The Ladder'
The Ladder, May 1964

The Ladder, May 1964[1]

Editor Phyllis Lyon
Del Martin
Barbara Gittings
Helen Sandoz
Barbara Grier
Categories News magazine
Frequency Monthly
Publisher Daughters of Bilitis
First issue October, 1956
Country Flag of the United States United States
Language English

The Ladder was the first nationally distributed lesbian publication in the United States. It was published monthly from 1956 to 1970, and once every other month in 1971 and 1972. It was the primary publication and method of communication for the Daughters of Bilitis, the first lesbian organization in the US. It was supported by ONE, Inc. and the Mattachine Society, with whom the DOB retained friendly relations. The name of the magazine was derived from the artwork on first cover, simple line drawings showing figures moving towards a ladder that disappeared into the clouds.

Contents

[edit] History

The first lesbian publication in the United States was a newsletter called Vice Versa, subtitled "American's Gayest Magazine". It was created and edited by a secretary named Edith Eyde using the psuedonym of Lisa Ben (an anagram of "lesbian") in Los Angeles, and distributed privately in that area from 1947 to 1948. Being a one-woman production, it had a limited reach.

The first edition of The Ladder appeared in October of 1956, edited by Phyllis Lyon, who co-founded the Daughters of Bilitis in 1955 with Del Martin, both of whom had journalism experience. Lyon edited The Ladder as "Ann Ferguson" for the first few months, but dropped the name as a way of encouraging their readers not to hide.[2] Many of its contributors used pseudonyms or initials. It was a newsletter of a dozen or so pages, produced on a typewriter, copied by a mimeograph, and hand stapled, that included book reviews, news, poetry, short stories, letters from readers, and news of DOB meetings. The Ladder was issued in a brown paper covering for the duration of its existence. There were 175 copies of the first issue, and members of the DOB mailed them to every woman they knew who might be interested, all over the United States.[3] It soon became available in newsstands in major cities and by subscription, obtained by word of mouth[4]. It was also mailed to all the women doctors, lawyers, and other professionals found in the San Francisco telephone book.

By October of 1957, there were 400 subscribers on the mailing list.[5] An early respondent to the magazine was playwright Lorraine Hansberry, writing a letter of thanks in May of 1957 signed "L.H.N", offering $2.00 US for any back issues, and stating she was, "glad as heck that you exist."[1] Lyon published her entire letter, taking up four of the 20 pages of that issue. Historian Marcia Gallo wrote of The Ladder, "For women who came across a copy in the early days, The Ladder was a lifeline. It was a means of expressing and sharing otherwise private thoughts and feelings, of connecting across miles and disparate daily lives, of breaking through isolation and fear."[6]

In 1959 it took an unprecedented political stance against San Francisco mayoral candidate Russel Wolden who made an issue of incumbent mayor George Christopher's tenure as mayor making the city a haven for "sex deviants" [7][8]

[edit] Changes

In 1963 Barbara Gittings took over editing The Ladder, giving it a more politically urgent stance, and by adding "A Lesbian Review" under the title of the magazine. The line drawings on the cover were replaced with photos of lesbians in an attempt to make them more visible. The first woman who appeared in a photograph on the cover in May of 1964 was an unnamed model. The first woman who allowed her name to be printed was from Indonesia who had sent her picture and a letter explaining how isolated she was.[1] Except for the first two covers, the rest of the portraits that appeared on the cover of The Ladder were shot by Gittings' partner, Kay Lahusen. By 1966, Gittings remembered, there was a list of women who were willing to lend their photo and their name to the cover.[9] The improvement of the production quality in the magazine was evident due in large part to an anonymous donation of $100,000 US the DOB received from a source they knew only as "Pennsylvania" that was spread out between 1963 and 1969.[1]

Gittings was allied with Frank Kameny of the Mattachine Society and used Kameny's writings often in The Ladder. Gittings began picketing high profile locations such as the White House and the State Department, and reported on the picketing sessions, as well as encouraging others to do so in The Ladder. Differences in the direction of politics became an issue, and Gittings was ousted as the editor in 1966. One source claims it occurred after removing "For Adults Only" on the front cover neglecting to consult the Daughters of Bilitis.[7] Although another source says Gittings was ousted for getting too many issues out late.[10]

One of the earliest members of the Daughters of Bilitis, Helen Sandoz, took over the editorship, returning to a more apolitical and lighthearted stance, sometimes writing her editorials as her cat.

Barbara Grier took over as editor in 1968, having previously contributed to the magazine under a variety of pseudonyms that included Gene Damon, Lennox Strong, and Vern Nive. She made her most significant contribution as a book reviewer, and when she became the editor sought to turn it more professional. It became professionally printed with a smoother layout - the second issue under Grier was 48 pages. Although the headquarters for The Ladder were in San Francisco, Grier ran the magazine long distance from Kansas City. She tripled the subscription rate by removing "lesbian" from the cover to address more feminist issues.

[edit] Controversy at the end

In 1970 the DOB disbanded due to organizational problems, disagreements about aligning themselves with homophile organizations comprised predominantly with gay men, and supporting the growing feminist movement. Del Martin and Phyllis Lyon had joined the National Organization for Women and encouraged readers of the The Ladder to do the same. Younger members who were sparked by more confrontational methods of protest, didn't agree with some of the older members' ideas. Concerned that the magazine would be lost due to the lack of direction in the organization, DOB president Rita LaPorte took possession of the 3,800-member mailing list for The Ladder (of which there were only two copies, the subject of which was an annual article to assure women that their names were safe) to Reno to the ignorance of Martin and Lyons, and she and Barbara Grier continued to publish it until September of 1972 when they ran out of funds. When The Ladder severed its ties with the DOB, the anonymous donations to assist the magazine stopped.[1] A controversy arose between Del Martin and Phyllis Lyons, Barbara Gittings, and Helen Sandoz who maintain the mailing list was stolen, and Grier who stated taking the list was necessary to keep alive a dying organization.[1]

In 1975, Arno Press released a nine-volume compilation of The Ladder in hardback as part of their series "Lesbians and Gay Men in Society, History, and Literature" with a short foreword by Barbara Grier.

[edit] Content

In 1956, the Daughters of Bilitis wrote their mission statement, which was printed on the inside of every cover of the magazine until 1970:

1.Education of the variant...to enable her to understand herself and make her adjustment to society...this to be accomplished by establishing...a library...on the sex deviant theme; by sponsoring public discussions...to be conducted by leading members of the legal psychiatric, religious and other professions; by advocating a mode of behavior and dress acceptable to society.
2. Education of the public...leading to an eventual breakdown of erroneous taboos and prejudices...
3. Participation in research projects by duly authorized and responsible psychologists, sociologists, and other such experts directed towards further knowledge of the homosexual.
4. Investigation of the penal code as it pertain to the homosexual, proposal of changes,...and promotion of these changes through the due process of law in the state legislatures."[11]

[edit] Education of the variant

From the beginning, The Ladder sought to reach out to women who were isolated by assuring them in essays and editorials that they were not alone. It also sought to educate women about legal issues - the Daughters of Bilitis stood to serve women as a social alternative to bars, where gays were frequently arrested in the 1950s. Contributions often featured essays on famous lesbians and bisexual women throughout history such as Radclyffe Hall,[12] Queen Christina,[13] and Renee Vivien.[14]

Contributions by attorneys, psychiatrists, and doctors were common as were advice columns on how to raise children while being a "deviant".[15] Marion Zimmer Bradley offered advice on whether to stay married after one knows she is a lesbian.[16] And the issue of marriage was brought up again in 1959 when The Ladder reported on a panel discussion sponsored by the Daughters of Bilitis that debated if marriage could cure homosexuality, all opinions of psychotherapists at hand saying that it could not, and one offering that it was not to be cured as it was not a disease.[17] A 1957 column featuring a psychotherapist who offered his opinion on how one determines the source of lesbians' fear of men: "The basic problem in evaluating your personal problems is to find out why you are shying away from sexual relations with men. In other words, the problem is not why you like women, but why you don't like men."[18]

The Daughters of Bilitis also sponsored presentations on how to accept oneself as homosexual in an overwhelming negative society. "Many creative fields lie ahead of you IF you will stop despising yourselves, stop being ashamed and start creating a place for yourselves on this earth. It is not inconceivable. There are societies in the past which allowed homosexuals their place," said one visiting psychotherapist.[19]

[edit] The Ladder vs. Ann Aldrich

Poetry submissions began almost immediately, as did short story submissions with lesbian themes. Book reviews of current paperbacks were regular features, including a heated exchange in print between contributors to The Ladder and author Marijane Meaker as Ann Aldrich from 1957 to 1963. Meaker had written the immensely successful Spring Fire in 1952 under the name Vin Packer and was known to the Daughters of Bilitis. Meaker's books We Walk Alone from 1955 and We, Too, Must Love from 1958 were her version of Donald Webster Cory's The Homosexual in America, a nonfiction account published in 1951 about what it was like to live as a gay man in the US.[20] Meaker's books, published by Gold Medal Books, were distributed all over the US, and gave people in remote places an idea of what it was like to live as a lesbian. The books, however, were not particularly sympathetic to lesbians, and Del Martin and Barbara Grier took issue with Meaker's portrayals. They began to criticize the books in The Ladder and suggest that Meaker was expressing self-hatred in the books.[21][22][23][24] Del Martin wrote to Meaker personally in 1958, giving her a free subscription to the magazine. Meaker's reach to women was much broader through the distribution of her books, and she received so much mail from women asking for resources and support that she was unable to respond to all of it, so she referred the letter writers to the Daughters of Bilitis.[1] However, in print, Meaker responded to the open letters to her in The Ladder in her next book Carol in a Thousand Cities in 1960, by skewering the magazine's amateurish homemade appearance, fiction and poetry she didn't appreciate, and the ideas presented in the magazine. Again, The Ladder responded, once more calling Meaker's loyalties into question. [25][26][27] However negative Carol in a Thousand Cities was to The Ladder, it was major advertising for the DOB and letters poured in for them from all over the US.

[edit] Gender expression

The Daughters of Bilitis initially approached relations between lesbians and the heterosexual society at large by promoting assimilation as much as possible, in the hopes that heterosexuals would see that lesbians weren't drastically different from themselves.[28] The debate about the appropriateness and impact of women exhibiting masculine dress and behavior was carried out in the pages of The Ladder. "The kids in the fly-front pants and with the butch haircuts and mannish manner are the worst publicity we can get," wrote one reader in 1956, to which DOB President D. Griffin responded, "Our organization has already touched on that matter and converted a few to remembering that they are women first and a butch for fem secondly, so their attire should be that which society will accept. Contrary to belief, we have shown them that there is a place for them in society, but only if they wish to make it so."[28]

In June of 1957 a defense of some women's choice to wear pants was published under the title, "Tranvestitism - A Cross-Cultural Survey."[29] The November issue of the same year reprinted editorial sections from the San Francisco Examiner and the San Francisco Chronicle that begged women not to wear pants: "When ladies young and old wear sloppy slacks or tight pants on Market St. I wish I had a water pistol and could give each one of them a good squirt. Ladies, please be ladies."[30] However, in the same issue, an essay encouraged women to broaden their definition of "feminiity": "Of course we can (accept our femininity) if only we enlarge our view to include all women: the gentle, the shy the brave, the meek, the enterprising, the flamboyant..."[31] The issue of pants was brought up again in 1959 with the reprint of a UPI story stating the women in pants was to become fashionable that year,[32] and again when Gene Damon wrote an overview of women who had lived as men throughout Western history.[33]

When the Daughters of Bilitis or the Mattachine Society had a convention, the news was reported. The magazine compiled some of the first statistics about lesbians in the United States by sending their readership questionnaires, the first in 1957 and again in 1963. There was a marked difference in the tone of the magazine after Barbara Gittings heard Frank Kameny speak at the national DOB convention that attempting to find the cause of homosexuality was a waste of time since it was equal to heterosexuality. [10] Many articles from 1956 - 1963 focused on ways to function in an overwhelmingly homophobic world, but there then started to appear articles that were unapologetic in promoting lesbianism.

After Barbara Grier took over, artwork began to appear on the cover from artists such as Romaine Brooks and Georgia O'Keefe. Contributions by writers included articles by Jane Rule, Martha Shelley, and Rita Mae Brown.

[edit] Further resources

[edit] See Also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Gallo, Marcia. Different Daughters: A history of the Daughters of Bilitis and the Birth of the Lesbian Rights Movement, Carroll & Graf, 2006.
  2. ^ "Ann Ferguson is Dead!" The Ladder, Jan 1957, Vol. 1 Issue 4, p7.
  3. ^ Tobin, Kay, Wicker, R. The Gay Crusaders. Arno Press; 1975.
  4. ^ Unknown author. "Where Did We Get Your Name?" The Ladder. vol1 Issue 5: p 12
  5. ^ Martin, Del. "Growing Pains Don't Hurt" The Ladder 1957 vol.2 issue 1: pp. 5-6,27.
  6. ^ Gallo, Marcia. "Celebrating the Years of The Ladder." Off Our Backs. Washington: May/Jun 2005. Vol. 35, Iss. 5/6; p. 34
  7. ^ a b "Back in the day" at afterellen.com.
  8. ^ Lyon, Phyllis. "S.F. Election Aftermath" The Ladder; 1959 vol. 4 issue 3: p.23
  9. ^ Gittings, Barbara in "Barbara Gittings Tribute RIP". Retrieved November 10, 2007.
  10. ^ a b Soares, Maneula. ‘‘The Purloined Ladder: Its Place in Lesbian History.’’ Journal of Homosexuality (The Haworth Press, Inc.) Vol. 34, No. 3/4, 1998, pp. 27-49.
  11. ^ Katz, Jonathan. Gay American History. Crowell Publishers; 1974.
  12. ^ Damon, Gene. "Radclyffe Hall." The Ladder, Dec 1958, Vol. 3 Issue 3, p8.
  13. ^ Damon, Gene, Stuart, L. "The Tragedy of Queen Christina." Ladder, Jun 1963, Vol. 7 Issue 9, p6.
  14. ^ Dawn, Gene; Stuart, Lee. "Renee Vivien: Forgotten Lesbian Poet." The Ladder, May 1959, Vol. 3 Issue 8, p12.
  15. ^ "Relationship Not So ‘Deviant’ If Child Has Love and Security." The Ladder, Apr 1957, Vol. 1 Issue 7, p8.
  16. ^ Bradley, Marion Zimmer. "Some Remarks on Marriage." The Ladder, Jul 1957, Vol. 1 Issue 10, p14.
  17. ^ Brown, Patti. "Should Homosexuals Marry?" The Ladder, May 1959, Vol. 3 Issue 8, p21.
  18. ^ "Third Discussion on Fear." The Ladder, Jan 1957, Vol. 1 Issue 4, p4-6.
  19. ^ "Accept Yourself." The Ladder, May 1957, Vol. 1 Issue 8, p6.
  20. ^ Meeker, Martin. Contacts Desired: Gay and Lesbian Communications and Community, 1940s-1970s. University of Chicago Press, 2006.
  21. ^ "Walk Alone (Book)". Ladder, Jun 1957, Vol. 1 Issue 9, p15.
  22. ^ "Aldrich 'Walks Alone'." Ladder, Jun 1957, Vol. 1 Issue 9, p16.
  23. ^ B.G. "Ann Aldrich Does a Re-take." The Ladder, Jan 1958, Vol. 2 Issue 4, p12.
  24. ^ Martin, Del. "Open Letter to Ann Aldrich." The Ladder, Apr 1958, Vol. 2 Issue 7, p4.
  25. ^ Damon, Gene. "Carol in a Thousand Cities." The Ladder, Aug 1960, Vol. 4 Issue 11, p6-7, 2p
  26. ^ Foster, Jeannette H. "Ann of 10,000 Words Plus (Short Story)." The Ladder, Aug 1960, Vol. 4 Issue 11, p7.
  27. ^ Damon, Gene. Ladder, Oct63, Vol. 8 Issue 1, p18-20, 3p
  28. ^ a b Esterberg, Kristen. "From Accommodation to Liberation: A Social Movement Analysis of Lesbians in the Homophile Movement." Gender and Society, Vol. 8, No. 3, (Sep., 1994), pp. 424-443.
  29. ^ Stephens, Barbara. "Tranvestitism - A Cross-Cultural Survey." The Ladder, Jun 1957, Vol. 1 Issue 9, p10.
  30. ^ McDermott, John B. "On Wearing Slacks." The Ladder, Nov 1957, Vol. 2 Issue 2, p11.
  31. ^ Simons, Betty. "On Accepting Feminity." The Ladder, Nov 1957, Vol. 2 Issue 2, p12.
  32. ^ "Women In Pants - The Coming Thing." The Ladder, Jan59, Vol. 3 Issue 4, p6.
  33. ^ Damon, Gene. "Transvestism in Women." The Ladder, Feb 1959, Vol. 3 Issue 5, p11.
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