Panel Discussion: Interpreting Henry Street Settlement’s Queer History

Henry Street Settlement will hold “Steadies” & “Crushes”: Interpreting Henry Street Settlement’s Queer History, a post-Pride panel discussion, on Thursday, July 18, 2019, 6:30 to 8 p.m. in the Settlement’s historic headquarters at 265 Henry Street on the Lower East Side (note, requires walking up one flight of stairs).

Henry Street founder Lillian Wald was known—from letters found among her personal papers—to have had romantic relationships with two female activist-colleagues during the early 20th century. The panel will address not only Wald’s relationships but the larger supportive community of women at Henry Street whom she called “the family”—and the dynamics of interpreting LGBTQ history through a modern lens.

The panel will feature Blanche Wiesen Cook, professor of history and women’s studies at John Jay College, who discovered romantic letters to Wald. Wiesen Cook and panelist Clare Coss, playwright and author of Lillian D. Wald: Progressive Activist, have written extensively about Henry Street Settlement at the turn of the century and particularly about Wald’s female support networks.

Panelists Salonee Bhaman and Ain Gordon will open a broader conversation about interpreting LGBTQ stories from the past when there are gaps in the historical archive due to the laws and stigma of the time. Bhaman is a PhD candidate in history at Yale who has studied the New York City AIDS crisis and the more recent queer history of the Lower East Side. Ain Gordon is a writer, director, actor, educator, and cofounder of the Urban Memory Project, whose performances address queer history.

RSVP online at henrystreet.org/queerhistory











When: Thu., Jul. 18, 2019 at 6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

Henry Street Settlement will hold “Steadies” & “Crushes”: Interpreting Henry Street Settlement’s Queer History, a post-Pride panel discussion, on Thursday, July 18, 2019, 6:30 to 8 p.m. in the Settlement’s historic headquarters at 265 Henry Street on the Lower East Side (note, requires walking up one flight of stairs).

Henry Street founder Lillian Wald was known—from letters found among her personal papers—to have had romantic relationships with two female activist-colleagues during the early 20th century. The panel will address not only Wald’s relationships but the larger supportive community of women at Henry Street whom she called “the family”—and the dynamics of interpreting LGBTQ history through a modern lens.

The panel will feature Blanche Wiesen Cook, professor of history and women’s studies at John Jay College, who discovered romantic letters to Wald. Wiesen Cook and panelist Clare Coss, playwright and author of Lillian D. Wald: Progressive Activist, have written extensively about Henry Street Settlement at the turn of the century and particularly about Wald’s female support networks.

Panelists Salonee Bhaman and Ain Gordon will open a broader conversation about interpreting LGBTQ stories from the past when there are gaps in the historical archive due to the laws and stigma of the time. Bhaman is a PhD candidate in history at Yale who has studied the New York City AIDS crisis and the more recent queer history of the Lower East Side. Ain Gordon is a writer, director, actor, educator, and cofounder of the Urban Memory Project, whose performances address queer history.

RSVP online at henrystreet.org/queerhistory

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