Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Organizer of ‘Sip-In,’ a milestone for gay rights movement

- By Harrison Smith

Dick Leitsch, who became a leading gay rights activist in 1960s New York, where he helped end police entrapment of gays and organized the first major act of civil disobedien­ce by a gay rights group — a boozy sit-in known as the Sip-In — died Friday at a hospice center in Manhattan. He was 83.

The cause was liver cancer, said a niece, Cheryl Williams.

A bartender, freelance journalist and onetime Tiffany sales representa­tive, Mr. Leitsch was a self-described “hick from Kentucky who didn’t know anything about gay rights” when he followed a boyfriend to New York in 1959. He soon became a member and young leader of the Mattachine Society, an early gay advocacy group named after a group of medieval jesters who, disguised by masks, protested the oppression of peasants.

Mr. Leitsch rarely donned a mask himself. After being named president of the organizati­on’s New York chapter in 1965, he took the group in a more aggressive direction, taking on the city’s police chief and newly elected liberal mayor, John Lindsay, in campaigns that drew on the tactics of the AfricanAme­rican civil rights movement and became a model for other gay rights groups across the country.

In that pre-Stonewall era, a few years before an uprising at a Greenwich Village gay bar galvanized a broader protest movement for equality and acceptance, few gays used their name or showed their face on television. Mr. Leitsch was a notable exception, appearing on “The David Susskind Show,” in local news and radio broadcasts and at town-hall-style meetings.

While Mattachine’s Washington leader, Frank Kameny, focused on ending discrimina­tory practices at the level of the federal government, Mr. Leitsch’s work centered on a more quotidian, if nonetheles­s important, aspect of gay life: ending discrimina­tion and police entrapment at bars, one of the few places available for gay men and women to meet, mingle and organize.

In New York, the State Liquor Authority often revoked the licenses of bars that served gays, whom it targeted under a Prohibitio­nprovision barring “disorderly” customers. Plaincloth­es police officers flirted with gay men and lesbians who were then arrested on charges of “homosexual solicitati­on.”

Mr. Leitsch, collaborat­ing with poet Allen Ginsberg and meeting with city leaders, led a 1966 campaign to end the practice of gay entrapment in New York, according to Chauncey, a Columbia University history professor and author of “Gay New York.”

Building on the success of his entrapment campaign, Mr. Leitsch organized an effort to spotlight the refusal of bars to serve gay customers, which Mr. Chauncey described as “the first organized act of civil disobedien­ce by gay people.”

Known as the Sip-In, an alcohol-infused twist on the sit-ins that African Americans held at segregated lunch counters in the South, the protest took place at thelooking West Village bar Julius’, where the entrapment of a former Peace Corps volunteer had spurred Mr. Leitsch’s police-reform effort.

The event, chronicled one day later in a New York Times story titled “3 Deviates Invite Exclusion By Bars,” almost didn’t happen. Mr. Leitsch and his fellow protesters had originally planned to stage their protest at a bar on St. Mark’s Place, where a sign read, “If you are gay, please stay away.” But after tipping off journalist­s to the protest’s date and time, they arrived 10 minutes late and discovered that the bar had closed, apparently seeking to avoid negative press coverage.

Improvisin­g, the group walked a few blocks west to Howard Johnson’s, a popular gay hookup spot, and presented a statement to their waitress: “We are homosexual­s. We believe that a place of public accommodat­ion has an obligation to serve an orderly person, and that we are entitled to service so long as we are orderly.”

In place of a self-righteous refusal, the orderly, ordinaryme­n in dark suits were given a round of free drinks. Informed of their mission, the manager “doubled with laughter and had a waiter bring three bourbons to them,” the Times reported.

Mr. Leitsch tried again, visiting a tiki bar called the Waikiki that gave the men another round of free drinks, before finally heading to Julius’. “As soon as I said the word ‘homosexual,’” he later told the New Yorker, recalling his encounter with the bartender, “he said, ‘I can’t serve you.’”

While Mr. Leitsch pointed to the event as an example of institutio­nal discrimina­tion, the chief executive of the State Liquor Authority insisted it did not discrimina­te against gays and said individual bars had a right to refuse service to customers who were not “orderly.”

According to historian David Carter’s book “Stonewall: The Riots That Sparked the Gay Revolution,” Mr. Leitsch’s Sip-In led to a growing acceptance of gays at bars in New York and across the country.

Richard Joseph Leitsch, who often used the family name Valentine as his middle name, was born in Louisville, Ky., on May 11, 1935. His parents owned a candy and tobacco store and, because of his mother’s alcoholism, he was often left to look after his three younger siblings.

Mr. Leitsch never “came out” to his family, his niece said, and his parents never asked about his sexuality. “I believe his parents were the first white members of the Louisville chapter of the NAACP,” she recalled. “They were very open, very receptive.”

Mr. Leitsch attended Catholic schools, including what is now Bellarmine University in Louisville, and worked at New York bars and restaurant­s until he effectivel­y went into retirement around 2000 and began volunteeri­ng at the Church of Saint Mary the Virgin in Manhattan. Throughout that period he wrote occasional dispatches for gay newspapers and magazines, including a 1970 interview with then up-and-coming actress Bette Midler, titled “The Whole World’s a Bath!”

Survivors include a brother and sister. His partner of 17 years, Timothy Scoffield, was diagnosed with AIDS and died in 1989.

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