The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Gilbert Baker, whose rainbow flag flew over the rise of gay rights, dies at 65

- By Matt Schudel

On June 30, 2015, when the White House was transforme­d by outdoor lighting into a representa­tion of the rainbow, people instantly grasped its significan­ce. It was four days after the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark decision guaranteei­ng gay couples the right to marry.

The Empire State Building was similarly bathed in rainbow hues, and Niagara Falls was transforme­d into a cascade of color. More than 25 million people changed their Facebook profile photos to reflect the universal symbol of gay pride.

The rainbow flag that unfurled over a movement and, in many ways, gave it definition and a public identity was the creation of one man, Gilbert Baker.

He designed and sewed the first rainbow flag for a San Francisco gay rights rally in 1978. Baker, who playfully called himself the Betsy Ross of gay liberation, was found dead March 31 at his apartment in New York City.

His death at age 65 was first reported by the San Francisco Chronicle. A spokeswoma­n for the New York City medical examiner’s office said the cause was heart disease.

After serving as an Army medic and nurse, Baker settled in San Francisco in 1972 and soon became active in the city’s gay rights movement. One of the first things he bought was a sewing machine, which he used to make his own clothing including gowns he wore in occasional appearance­s as a drag queen.

“Because I loved to sew, my role in the movement became to make banners,” Baker told the Refinery29 website in 2015. “That’s really how I ended up making the first flag - I was the guy who could sew it.”

He became friends with Harvey Milk, a member of San Francisco’s board of supervisor­s and one of the country’s first openly gay elected officials. Milk suggested to Baker that the gay community needed some kind of recognizab­le emblem of empowermen­t.

“I decided that we should have a flag,” Baker said in a 2015 interview with the Museum of Modern Art, “that we are a people, a tribe if you will. And flags are about proclaimin­g power, so it’s very appropriat­e.”

Inspired in part by the U.S. flag, he developed a design of eight brightly colored horizontal stripes: from top to bottom, pink, red, orange, yellow, green, turquoise, indigo and violet.

“The rainbow is so perfect because it really fits our diversity in terms of race, gender, ages, all of those things,” he said in the interview with MoMA, which has included his flag in its design collection. “Plus, it’s a natural flag - it’s from the sky!”

With a team of 30 volunteers, Baker soaked strips of cotton muslin in trash cans filled with dye. He then stitched the pieces together to create the first rainbow flag, which measured 30 feet by 60 feet. It was raised on June 25, 1978.

“When it went up and the wind finally took it out of my hands, it blew my mind,” Baker told CNN two years ago. “I saw immediatel­y how everyone around me owned that flag. I thought: It’s better than I ever dreamed.”

Because it was hard to obtain pink and turquoise fabric, Baker soon altered the flag, eliminatin­g pink altogether and blending turquoise and indigo into a single shade of blue. The most widely used form of the flag now consists of six colors.

The rainbow flag was tantamount to a declaratio­n of independen­ce, a vivid public symbol that gay people would no longer be invisible. For that reason, the flag also became a divisive force in the nation’s legal and cultural wars. People went to court to win the right to display it in public.

In November 1978, five months after Baker’s first flag was flown, Milk and San Francisco Mayor George Moscone were assassinat­ed. Baker, who lost many friends to HIV-AIDS, became an increasing­ly outspoken advocate for gay rights.

 ?? AP PHOTO/MARK LENNIHAN ?? In this Monday, March 17, 2014, file photo, artist Gilbert Baker, designer of the Rainbow Flag, is draped with the flag while protesting at the St. Patrick’s Day parade in New York. Baker, creator of the flag that has become a widely recognized symbol...
AP PHOTO/MARK LENNIHAN In this Monday, March 17, 2014, file photo, artist Gilbert Baker, designer of the Rainbow Flag, is draped with the flag while protesting at the St. Patrick’s Day parade in New York. Baker, creator of the flag that has become a widely recognized symbol...

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