Harvey Bernard Milk
(May 22, 1930 – November 27, 1978) was an American
politician and the first openly gay elected official in the history of California, where he was elected to the
San Francisco Board of Supervisors. Although
he was the most pro-LGBT politician
in the United States at the time,
politics and activism were not his early interests; he was neither open about
his sexuality nor civically active until he was 40, after his experiences in
the counterculture movement of the 1960s.
In 1972, Milk moved from New York City to the Castro
District of San Francisco amid a migration of gay and bisexual men. He took
advantage of the growing political and economic power of the neighborhood to
promote his interests and unsuccessfully ran three times for political office.
Milk's theatrical campaigns earned him increasing popularity, and in 1977 he
won a seat as a city supervisor. His election was made possible by a key
component of a shift in San Francisco
politics.
Milk served almost eleven months in office, during which he
sponsored a bill banning discrimination in public accommodations, housing, and
employment on the basis of sexual orientation. The Supervisors passed the bill by a vote of 11-1 and was signed into
law by Mayor Moscone. On November 27, 1978, Milk and Mayor George Moscone were assassinated by Dan White, who was another city supervisor. White had recently
resigned to pursue a private business enterprise, but that endeavor eventually
failed and he sought to get his old job back. White was sentenced to seven
years in prison for manslaughter, which was later reduced to five years. He was
released in 1983 and committed suicide by carbon monoxide inhalation two years
later.
Despite his short career in politics, Milk became an icon in
San Francisco and a martyr in the
gay community. In 2002, Milk was called "the most famous and most significantly
open LGBT official ever elected in the United
States". Anne Kronenberg, his final campaign
manager, wrote of him: "What set
Harvey apart from you or me was that he was a visionary. He imagined a
righteous world inside his head and then he set about to create it for real,
for all of us." Milk was
posthumously awarded the Presidential
Medal of Freedom in 2009.
Early life
Milk was born in the New
York City suburb of Woodmere, to
William Milk and Minerva Karns. He was the younger son
of Lithuanian Jewish parents and the
grandson of Morris Milk, a
department store owner who helped to organize the first synagogue in the
area. As a child, Harvey was teased for
his protruding ears, big nose, and oversized feet, and tended to grab attention
as a class clown. While he was in school, he played football and developed a
passion for opera. In his teens, he knew that he had homosexual tendencies but
kept it a closely guarded secret. "I
can't let it out," he said. "It
would kill my parents." Under
his name in the high school yearbook, it read, "Glimpy Milk—and they say WOMEN are never at a loss for
words".
Milk graduated from Bay
Shore High School in Bay Shore, New
York, in 1947 and attended New York
State College for Teachers in Albany
(now the State University of New York at
Albany) from 1947 to 1951, majoring in mathematics. He also wrote for the
college newspaper. One classmate remembered, "He was never thought of as a possible queer—that's what you
called them then—he was a man's man".
Early career
After graduation, Milk joined the United States Navy during the Korean
War. He served aboard the submarine rescue ship USS Kittiwake (ASR-13) as a diving officer. He later transferred to
Naval Station, San Diego to serve as
a diving instructor. In 1955, he was
discharged from the Navy at the rank
of lieutenant, junior grade.
Milk's early career was marked by frequent changes; in later
years he would take delight in talking about his metamorphosis from a
middle-class Jewish boy. He began
teaching at George W. Hewlett High
School on Long Island. In 1956, he met Joe Campbell, at the Jacob
Riis Park beach, a popular location for gay men in Queens. Campbell was nearly six years younger than Milk, and Milk
pursued him passionately. Even after they moved in together, Milk wrote
Campbell romantic notes and poems. Growing bored with their New York lives, they decided to move to
Dallas, Texas, but they were unhappy
there and moved back to New York,
where Milk got a job as an actuarial statistician at an insurance firm. Campbell and Milk separated after almost six
years; it would be his longest relationship.
Milk tried to keep his early romantic life separate from his
family and work. Once again bored and single in New York, he thought of moving to Miami to marry a lesbian friend to "have a front and each would not be in the way of the other". However, he decided to remain in New York, where he secretly pursued gay
relationships. In 1962 Milk became involved with Craig Rodwell, who was 10 years younger. Though Milk courted
Rodwell ardently, waking him every morning with a call and sending him notes,
Milk was uncomfortable with Rodwell's involvement with the New York Mattachine Society, a gay-rights
organization. When Rodwell was arrested for walking in Riis Park, and charged with inciting a riot and with indecent
exposure (the law required men's swimsuits to extend from above the navel to
below the thigh), he spent three days in jail. The relationship soon ended as
Milk became alarmed at Rodwell's tendency to agitate the police.
Milk abruptly stopped working as an insurance actuary and
became a researcher at the Wall Street
firm Bache & Company. He was
frequently promoted despite his tendency to offend the older members of the
firm by ignoring their advice and flaunting his success. Although he was
skilled at his job, co-workers sensed that Milk's heart was not in his work. He started a romantic relationship with Jack Galen McKinley and recruited him
to work on conservative Republican Barry Goldwater's 1964 presidential campaign. Their relationship was troubled. When McKinley
first began his relationship with Milk in late 1964, McKinley was 16 years old.
He was prone to depression and sometimes
threatened to commit suicide if Milk did not show him enough attention. To make a point to McKinley, Milk took him to
the hospital where Milk's ex-lover, Joe
Campbell, was himself recuperating from a suicide attempt, after his lover Billy Sipple left him. Milk had
remained friendly with Campbell, who had entered the avant-garde art scene in Greenwich Village, but Milk did not
understand why Campbell's despondency was sufficient cause to consider suicide
as an option.
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