LGBT culture in Brighton and Hove

Cultural and demographic feature of Brighton and Hove

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342 MSM activity made illegal
1533 Death penalty introduced for MSM activity
1543 Buggery Act extended to Wales
1828 Offences Against the Person Act 1828
1835 James Pratt and John Smith executed
1861 Death penalty for buggery abolished
1885 Labouchere Amendment introduced
1889 Cleveland Street scandal
1895 Oscar Wilde found guilty of gross indecency
1912 The Cave of the Golden Calf opens
1921 Plans to make lesbian activity illegal defeated
1936 Mark Weston transitions
1952 John Nott-Bower begins crackdown
1954 Pitt-Rivers, Montagu, Wildeblood imprisoned
1954 Alan Turing commits suicide
1957 Wolfenden report released
1967 MSM activity made legal (England & Wales)
1972 First British Gay Pride Rally
1976 Jeremy Thorpe resigns as Liberal leader
1981 MSM activity made legal (Scotland)
1981 First case of AIDS reported in the UK
1982 MSM activity made legal (NI)
1983 Gay men barred from donating blood
1984 Chris Smith elected as first openly gay MP
1987 Operation Spanner begins
1988 Section 28 comes into force
1989 Stonewall UK forms
1994 Age of consent for MSM becomes 18
1997 Angela Eagle becomes first openly lesbian MP
1998 Bolton 7 found guilty
1998 Lord Alli becomes first openly gay Lord
1999 Admiral Duncan bombing
2000 Gay men allowed in HM Armed Forces
2001 Age of consent equalised to 16
2001 MSM activity involving multiple men legal
2002 Same sex couples granted equal rights to adopt
2003 Section 28 repealed
2004 Civil partnerships introduced
2004 Gender Recognition Act 2004
2006 Discrimination made illegal
2008 Equalised access to IVF for lesbian couples
2008 Incitement to homophobic hatred made a crime
2009 Public apology to Alan Turing
2010 Equality Act 2010
2011 Gay men allowed to donate blood (1 yr deferral)
2013 Nikki Sinclaire becomes first openly trans MEP
2013 Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Act 2013
2014 First same-sex marriages take place
2016 MSM activity not grounds for military discharge
2017 Turing law implemented
2017 Blood donation deferral 3 months (excl. NI)
2019 MPs legislate for gay marriage in NI
2020 Gay marriage legal across UK, incl. NI
2020 Blood donation deferral 3 months (incl. NI)
2021 Blood donation deferral equalised
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People enjoying the annual Brighton Pride carnival event, in 2007
Rainbow flags in St James's Street, Kemptown

The LGBT community of Brighton and Hove is one of the largest in the United Kingdom. Brighton, a seaside resort on the south coast of England, has been described in some media as a "gay capital" of the UK,[1][2][3] with records pertaining to LGBT history dating back to the early 19th century.[4]

Many LGBT pubs, clubs, bars, restaurants, cafés and shops are located around Brighton and in particular around St James's Street in Kemptown.[5][6] Several LGBT charities, publishers, social and support groups are also based in the city. Brighton Pride is the largest Pride event in the UK, celebrated at the start of August and attracting as many as 450,000 people.[7][8]

In a 2014 estimate, 11–15% of the city's population aged 16 or over is thought to be lesbian, gay or bisexual.[9] The city also had the highest percentage of same-sex households in the UK in 2004[10] and the largest number of civil partnership registrations outside London in 2013.[11]

History

Brighton has recorded LGBT history in the city since the 19th century. Many men were initially drawn to Brighton by the enormous numbers of soldiers garrisoned in the town during the Napoleonic Wars. Evidence suggests that a floating population and good transport links with London helped its reputation as a place for the LGBT community. By the 1930s, Brighton started to flourish as a gay destination and many gay and lesbian pubs started to establish themselves. During the Second World War, Brighton was filled with soldiers. Women and men in the forces who were away from home meeting other lesbians and gay people for the first time in their lives also heard about Brighton and its special pleasures and helped turn it into a gay destination in the post-war years.

Demographics

In a 2014 estimate, 11-15% of the city's population aged 16 or over is thought to be lesbian, gay or bisexual.[9] The 2001 census revealed that Brighton and Hove had the highest proportion of same-sex households in the UK at 1.29%: 2,544 persons said that they lived with a person of the same sex.[12] The 2011 census did not measure same-sex households specifically but showed that Brighton and Hove had the highest number of civil partnerships in the UK, at 2,346 individuals or 3.1% of all legal relationships within the unitary authority area.[13] The city also had the largest number of civil partnership registrations outside London in 2013.[11] The 2021 census showed that the largest percentage of LGBTQ+ reside in the Kemptown area, where 20.11% of respondents said they were LGBO (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, or Other).[14]

Events

Brighton Pride is an event, and wider organization, which promotes equality and diversity, and advances education to eliminate discrimination against the LGBT community. The major event is an annual summer festival held in the first week of August,[15] which usually consists of a parade through the city centre, a festival event in Preston Park, the Pride Village Party and other club parties. Since 2013, it has also included an Arts and Film Festival and a Pride Dog Show.

The parade has attracted as many as 450,000 attendees[8] and 50,000 people attend the park festival in 2018.[16] The event brings 2% of the city's annual visitors in one day[16] and in 2018 introduced an estimated £18 million to the city's economy.[8] It is credited as one of the main ways Brighton has boosted its economy from tourism.[17]

Trans Pride has taken place every July since 2013 with a parade and a weekend of events.[18]

Eyes Wide Open is a queer film strand, regularly showcasing sexual and gender minorities on screens across the city.[19]

Organisations

The Brighton & Hove LGBT Switchboard is a telephone helpline that describes itself as 'providing a service to the lesbian, gay, bisexual & trans communities since April 1975' and is one of the oldest in the UK.

The Clare Project is a local support group which provides a safe and confidential meeting place for anyone exploring issues around their gender identity, besides organising other events such as monthly meals.

MindOut is a mental health service run by and for LGBT people, based in Brighton and Hove.

The city also has the Allsorts Youth Project which aims to meet the needs of lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and unsure youth in Brighton & Hove and the wider East Sussex area.

Both Brighton and Sussex universities have active LGBT organizations and they often work together to cater to the needs of LGBT students. Sussex LGBTQ is for students at the University of Sussex and LGBrighTon is for students at Brighton University.

The Brighton Ourstory Project was set up to collect and preserve lesbian and gay community history in the area.[20]

In 2000 the large-scale LGBT community survey, Count Me In, led to the development of an LGBT Community Strategy 2001-06 for Brighton & Hove. Spectrum developed from this process to work with local services and planners in implementing the strategy and to provide infrastructure and community development support for the LGBT community. Its aim was to act as an independent voice, negotiating the rights of LGBT people locally with a specific focus on the needs of marginalised sections of the LGBT community. A second study, Count Me in Too!, published its 'Initial findings Reports' in 2007, in partnership between the University of Brighton and Spectrum. The second study aimed to identify gaps in the original research and update the strategy.

A free magazine is distributed in the city: Gscene, which describes itself as "the gay and lesbian lifestyle, listings and community magazine for Brighton and Hove".

Brighton has a gay and lesbian sports society called BLAGSS which offers a range of 17 sports or activities to its 600+ members. The city also has LGBTQ+ sports clubs such as Brighton & Hove Sea Serpents RFC,[21] a branch of the international Frontrunners , Brighton & Hove Frontrunners,[22] formed in 2018, which holds an annual Rainbow Run 5k the day before Brighton Pride[23] and a branch of the LGBTQ+ aquatics Out to swim (Out To Swim Brighton), plus many more. There are also two congregations of the Metropolitan Community Church.

Historical events

The duo Miss Jason & Maisie Trollette performing at the Legends Cabaret Big Top at Brighton Pride in Preston Park.

An early recording of the LGBT community in Brighton was in August 1822, when George Wilson, a servant from Newcastle upon Tyne, was accused by a guardsman he had met in the Duke of Wellington public house in Pool Valley of having offered him a sovereign and two shillings to go with him onto the beach to "commit an unnatural crime".[24]

Another early story of the LGBT community in the area is that of philanthropist Angela Burdett-Coutts (1814–1906), a friend of both Charles Dickens and the Duke of Wellington, who spent part of each year at the Royal Albion Hotel with her companion Hannah. The couple were devoted to each other, socially recognised as a pair, and even sent joint Christmas cards. When Hannah died in 1878, Baroness Burdett-Coutts said she was utterly crushed by the loss of "my poor darling, the companion and sunshine of my life for 52 years".[24]

A walking tour 'Piers & Queers' explores the historical sites and characters of LGBT interest.[25]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Brighton is 'gay capital'". The Evening Standard. 13 April 2012.
  2. ^ "Sorry Bristol, Brighton is probably the best city in the UK - Metro News". Metro. 25 March 2014.
  3. ^ "BBC NEWS - Magazine - The UK Love Map". BBC. 14 February 2006.
  4. ^ "Brighton Ourstory :: Brighton's history". brightonourstory.co.uk.
  5. ^ "Calls for Brighton's St James's Street to be pedestrianised or it will 'wither and die'". The Argus.
  6. ^ "Calls for Brighton and Hove "gay village"". The Argus.
  7. ^ "Brighton Pride safe 'until 2020′ under new license". PinkNews. 14 November 2014.
  8. ^ a b c "Brighton Pride 2018 was biggest one yet - 450,000 people make the city £18m". The Argus. Retrieved 28 February 2022.
  9. ^ a b "Brighton & Hove City Snapshot: Report of Statistics 2014" (PDF). Corporate Policy and Research Team at Brighton & Hove City Council. p. 20. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  10. ^ "BBC NEWS - England - Brighton 'has most gay couples'". bbc.co.uk. 3 February 2004.
  11. ^ a b "Civil Partnerships in the UK, 2013 - ONS". ons.gov.uk. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015.
  12. ^ "Brighton 'has most gay couples'". BBC News. 3 February 2004. Retrieved 30 August 2009.
  13. ^ "ONS 2011 Census Data Release". Retrieved 12 December 2012.
  14. ^ "Sexual orientation - Census Maps, ONS". www.ons.gov.uk. Retrieved 6 January 2023.
  15. ^ "All About Pride". Archived from the original on 4 August 2005.
  16. ^ a b Kemp, Paul (26 June 2014). "Pride: More than a celebration". Brighton & Hove Independent. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  17. ^ Bowden, Geoffrey (10 September 2013). "How Brighton has boosted tourism with Pride, marathons, rugby and Turner". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  18. ^ Wakefield, Lily (16 July 2022). "20,000 people march for trans rights and liberation at Trans Pride Brighton". PinkNews. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  19. ^ "Eyes Wide Open". eyeswideopencinema.co.uk.
  20. ^ "Brighton Ourstory homepage". Brighton Ourstory. 1 April 2014. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  21. ^ "Brighton and Hove Sea Serpents". RFU. Retrieved 15 November 2017.
  22. ^ "Home". 20 March 2023. Retrieved 5 September 2023.
  23. ^ www.brightonrainbowrun.co.uk
  24. ^ a b "Brighton's history". Brighton Ourstory. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  25. ^ "Piers & Queers - tour of LGBTQ Brighton". www.onlyinbrighton.co.uk.

External links

  • BLAGSS - Brighton Lesbian and Gay Sports Society
  • MindOut - LGBT mental health project
  • Clare Project - a self-supporting group open to anyone wishing to explore issues around gender identity
  • Allsorts Youth Project
  • Sussex University LGBTQ Society
  • Count Me In Too!
  • Home[permanent dead link] LGBT Church
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