The Denver Post

He gave up State Dept. job to come out

- By Olesia Plokhii Monmouth University, via The Washington Post

In July 1975, the U.S. Civil Service Commission reversed long-standing policies that effectivel­y prohibited gays from working in government. There had been no explicit ban, but reportedly hundreds of men and women over the decades had seen their careers ruined on the grounds of “immoral conduct” at the first hint of their sexual identities being exposed.

Gay activists hailed as a victory the commission’s ruling, which followed a federal court decision. But it did not cover such agencies as the Secret Service, the FBI or the Foreign Service, which are administer­ed separately. Gays in those bureaus were believed to be more susceptibl­e to blackmail — security risks given the sensitivit­y of their jobs, especially in an era when psychiatri­sts had only just declassifi­ed homosexual­ity as a mental disorder.

Three months after the commission’s ruling, amid his increasing­ly difficult struggle with being forced to muffle his sexuality, 35year-old Foreign Service officer Tom Gallagher attended a Washington gathering of the Gay Activist Alliance. He served on a panel titled “Gays as Federal Employees” that included Franklin Kameny, a gay Army Map Service astronomer who had been fired in 1957 and subsequent­ly spearheade­d the Washington area’s gay-rights movement.

The panel proved to be what Gallagher — who died July 8 at age 77 — called his “coming out party.”

“I didn’t want to lie and hide anymore,” he said in a 2012 oral history with the Associatio­n for Diplomatic Studies and Training. “While I was not interested in publicity, on the other hand, if my homosexual­ity became an issue in any relationsh­ip for the rest of my life, I wanted to be honest about it and not lie.”

At the same time, he added, “I was absolutely scared to death” by appearing in public as a gay man at a time when a stigma was still very much attached to homosexual­ity in the public realm. Media coverage, he said, tended to focus on the “prurient” aspects of the movement.

“I was terrified of finding my picture on the front page of Time,” he said in the oral history. “I was concerned for my mother, a conservati­ve Catholic who would have been mortified if she found herself the object of pity at St. Mary’s Church in Deal, N.J., because her son had humiliated her in the national media. I also didn’t want to lose my job. I had no other career prospects, and very little money in the bank.”

Neverthele­ss, when he was asked as a panelist what his colleagues at the State Department said about his sexuality, he said no one yet knew. “‘I guess this is a coming out party,’ I said, and the whole room stood up to give me my first standing ovation,” he recalled. “Great fun; but when I went home that evening I was still scared witless.”

After a decade-long diplomatic career that took him from Saudi Arabia to Nigeria to Ecuador, Gallagher left the State Department in 1976 rather than submit to what he imagined would be an arduous and humiliatin­g security-clearance renewal.

He moved to Los Angeles and later San Francisco to pursue a career as a social worker. He spent nearly two decades providing support and services to AIDS patients and mentally ill senior citizens before returning to the State Department in 1994 — a year before President Bill Clinton signed an executive order lifting the Cold War-era practice of preventing gays from obtaining security clearances.

Before retiring in 2005, Gallagher worked as country officer for Eritrea and Sudan and as regional adviser for Europe in the Office of Internatio­nal Health.

In 2012, then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton singled out Gallagher as an example of the progress made for gay State Department employees. “He risked his career when he came out and became the first openly gay Foreign Service officer,” Clinton said at the 20th anniversar­y of GLIFAA, the agency’s LGBTQ personnel associatio­n. “I don’t want any of you who are a lot younger ever to take for granted what it took for people like Tom Gallagher to pave the way for all of you.”

While Gallagher was not involved in helping end bans on gays inside the fed- eral government, his coming out was significan­t because it came at a pivotal moment in the struggle for gay employees, said David Johnson, who wrote “The Lavender Scare: The Cold War Persecutio­n of Gays and Lesbians in the Federal Government.”

“It was courageous of him to come out publicly while he was a Foreign Service officer,” said Johnson, an associate professor of history at the University of South Florida.

Thomas Patrick Gallagher was born in Manhattan on Sept. 11, 1940. His parents worked for a wealthy family in New Jersey — his mother, who was an Irish immigrant, as a maid, and his father as a chauffeur.

Gallagher and his mother lived over a garage on the estate in New Jersey, and Gallagher caddied at a nearby golf club as a boy.

Educated in a Catholic school, he said in the oral history that he yearned as a child to become a church missionary “mainly so that I could go to Africa and look for Tarzan.”

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