Community Corner

AIDS Foundation Urges City To Save Home Of Gay-Rights Pioneer

The 1911 bungalow home of Morris Kight in the Westlake neighborhood, is listed on the California Register of Historical Resources.

LOS ANGELES, CA — Protesters gathered outside Los Angeles Councilwoman Eunisses Hernandez's field office in Glassell Park Monday and urged her to help preserve the residence of 20th century Los Angeles gay-rights pioneer Morris Kight.

The 1911 California bungalow home, located in the Westlake neighborhood, is listed on the California Register of Historical Resources. The protesters called for the site to be declared locally as a Historic Cultural Monument, but Hernandez's office has said she would support a lesser "site of" designation, which would allow the owner to redevelop the site.

"They (the city) just want to be able to put up a little plaque up," said Miki Jackson, a close friend of Kight's and an AIDS Healthcare Foundation consultant who led the protest Tuesday morning. "We have so few monuments, less than 1%, in this whole city that have to with the LGBTQ population."

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The foundation is seeking a petition for Historic Cultural Monument status for the Kight residence, which will be heard Tuesday during the council's Planning and Land Use Management Committee.

"As Pride month begins, we call on civic-minded Angelenos and the public at-large to help save Morris Kight's home, site of some of the earliest uncloseted LGBTQ history in Los Angeles," Jackson said in a statement. "We urge city officials on the PLUM Committee to honor Morris' remarkable and fearless legacy by approving full Historic Cultural Monument status for his Fourth Street residence."

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The Los Angeles Conservancy on its website states "Morris Kight (1919- 2003) is considered one of the founding fathers of the American LGBTQ civil rights movement." His home was a "hub of LGBTQ social activity in the 20th century helped form the backdrop to his work as an activist and gay rights pioneer."

Kight co-founded several "prominent" LGBTQ rights organizations, including the Committee for Homosexual Freedom, which became the Gay Liberation Front in 1969, and spearheaded the formation of the Gay Community Services Center, better known Monday at the Los Angeles LGBT Center.

In 1970, he co-founded the Christopher Street West gay pride parade in L.A., the first gay pride parade and festival in the world.

Jackson said Tuesday's protest was "very successful" because the goal was to raise awareness and get the attention of the council.

"This is Pride month, and giving them (owner and developer) a license to tear down the very house where Pride was conceived -- our Pride parade on the West Coast -- is not the way to celebrate LGBTQ Pride Month," Jackson said.

"Especially, when we're threatened from all sides. There's over 400 pieces of legislation going through states all over this country to diminish, take away and criminalize LGBTQ+ people."

Jackson said the AIDS Healthcare Foundation will address council during Tuesday's meeting and continue to urge the PLUM Committee to give Kight's home the Historic Cultural Monument status to preserve LGBTQ+ history.

City News Service