Bangkok Post

UK’s first LGBTI museum opens in London

- PAULINE FROISSART

Queer Britain, the UK’s first LGBTI museum, opened its doors in London last week, promising to bring the history and culture of the community to a wider audience.

Housed in a 19th-century building in a redevelope­d area behind King’s Cross railway station, the museum has been four years in the making and is entirely financed by private donations.

A major exhibition is slated for the coming months combining photos, artworks and costumes. Visitors can already discover the history of the community in the UK, from cross-dressing Victorians to more recent Pride marches.

Pioneers honoured include racing driver Roberta Cowell, thought to be the first British trans woman known to have had reassignme­nt surgery, and Justin Fashanu, the first profession­al footballer to publicly acknowledg­e he was gay.

Fashanu — who in 1981 became the country’s most expensive black player when he made a £1 million move from Norwich City to Nottingham Forest — killed himself in 1998, eight years after coming out.

One of the museum’s managers, Stephanie Stevens, said Queer Britain was “a permanent place for us to be able to celebrate who we are, the amazing contributi­ons we’ve made to history, and then to educate the nation so that they know about those contributi­ons as well”.

“We want to reach everyone,” regardless of gender, sexuality or identity, Stevens said.

“It’s important to have this museum and this space because as queer people we are so often expected to be grateful for the crumbs off the table.”

The museum in the trendy Granary Square developmen­t, where barges once unloaded their goods from the Regent’s Canal, is free, with the aim of widening the message.

Stevens described it as for “all of those people who feel like their voices haven’t been heard” and “the people that never heard those voices”.

The photograph­s in the exhibition are a reminder of the long road travelled, including of the acceptance of gay members of parliament.

In 1977, Maureen Colquhoun, the UK’s first openly lesbian MP, was deselected by her constituen­cy party because of her sexuality and feminist views.

The Labour party’s ruling National Executive Committee overruled the decision the following year, agreeing with her that she had been unfairly dismissed because of her sexual orientatio­n.

Her treatment contrasts with that of a popular former leader of the Scottish Conservati­ves, Ruth Davidson, decades later, whose abilities as a politician attracted far more interest and comment than her sexuality.

In March, another Tory lawmaker, Jamie Wallis, received messages of support from colleagues including Prime Minister Boris Johnson, after becoming the first MP to openly declare they were transgende­r.

The road to decriminal­ising homosexual­ity in the UK began with the Sexual Offences Act in 1967 but it would take several more decades for further reform.

Same-sex marriage was made legal in England, Scotland and Wales in 2014 but only in 2020 in Northern Ireland, due to opposition from religious conservati­ves. Hurdles still remain: last month, the government promised to outlaw so-called “gay conversion therapy” but not for trans men and women.

“In the current climate that we’re in, it’s really important to remember that there are things going on around the world that aren’t up to scratch and that definitely needs to be worked on,” said Stevens.

But a free museum can help “in educating people around that”, Stevens added.

 ?? ?? Photos in a gallery of Queer Britain in London.
Photos in a gallery of Queer Britain in London.

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