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The History Hour

America’s first gay election candidate

The History Hour

BBC

History, Society & Culture, Personal Journals

4.4879 Ratings

🗓️ 9 July 2022

⏱️ 51 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In 1961 the first openly gay person ran for public office in the United States. He was a drag queen called Jose Sarria, well-known for his performances at the bohemian 'Black Cat' bar in San Francisco. He was determined to stop gay people being second-class citizens. His friend and fellow drag performer Mike-Michelle spoke to Josephine McDermott about his memories of the campaign.

In 1928 the smear test was invented by Dr George Papanicoloau, a Greek immigrant who had made a new life in the United States. He discovered a way of detecting changes in cells from a woman’s cervix, which meant cancer could be prevented from developing. His work has stopped millions of women worldwide getting cancer. Dr Papanicolaou’s great niece Olga Stamatiou speaks to Laura Jones.

It’s 10 years since scientists in Geneva said they believed they had found the Higgs Boson - known as the 'God particle'. In July 2012 after more than 40 years of searching, teams taking part in experiments at the Large Hadron Collider confirmed the existence of the particle which gives everything mass. Dr André David from CERN speaks to Laura Jones.

In 1968 and early 1969 university students across Japan fought pitched battles with riot police after they barricaded themselves into their lecture halls and went on strike. They were protesting about the poor quality of their education and the inequalities of Japanese society in a period of rapid economic change. Emily Finch talks to Kazuki Kumamoto who was a young student who joined the protests. This is a Whistledown production for BBC World Service.

The south-east region of Nigeria declared itself to be the independent state of Biafra. In response, Nigerian forces invaded the state on the 6th July 1967, beginning the Nigerian Civil War. More than a million people died before the fighting stopped. We bring you one child’s story of getting caught up in the frontline. In 2021 Paul Waters spoke to Patricia Ngozi Ebigwe, now better known as TV and music star Patti Boulaye, who was 13 years old when she had to try to escape the conflict.

(Photo: Jose Sarria in drag. Credit: The Jose Sarria Foundation)

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello and welcome to the History Hour podcast from the BBC with me Max Pearson and the team behind the witness history strand on the world service.

0:07.0

This week from the 1960s student riots in Japan.

0:11.0

It was just like a terrible road.

0:14.0

I was just outside the gates of the campus.

0:18.0

There were riot police firing tear gas and some of it covered me.

0:22.0

Plus the remarkable story of the man who gave the world the cervical smear test saving millions of women.

0:28.0

We'll relive the horror of the Biafran war and the joy of the discovery of the Higgs boson particle.

0:34.7

So that's where I really had to go back and dust my quantum fuel theory books and see what is this Higgs boson.

0:44.3

That's all coming up later in the podcast, but first one of the early moments in the evolution

0:48.6

of gay rights in the US.

0:50.9

This is from 1961 when the first openly gay person ran for public office in California.

0:57.0

He was a drag queen called Jose Saria, well known for his performances at the Bohemian Black Cat Bar in San Francisco.

1:04.0

Josephine McDermott has been looking at his story and Joe is here now.

1:08.0

Joe. It was such a privilege to find out about Jose Saria's story. San Francisco today is known by many as the gay

1:16.4

capital of the world, but as Jose Saria's story shows us in the late 1950s, he very much felt like a second-class citizen and in fact

1:25.2

homosexuality was considered a mental illness. His friend Mike Michelle told me

1:30.0

his memories of the election campaign and an incredible character.

1:34.0

Hello, hello everybody.

1:38.0

I'm glad to see you are here to sing and dance and entertain you and bring you. This is Jose Saria. He wants to be elected, but he's not a politician.

1:50.5

Unbed, of course you can rely. So hello. petition.

1:53.0

I'm bad, of course you can rely. So hello, hello everybody.

1:56.0

We all welcome you, the Black Cat welcome Joe.

...

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