Reenactment of the 1965 Gay Rights Picket at the White House

Thu Apr 17 2025 at 04:15 pm to 05:15 pm

The White House | Washington

Rainbow History Project
Publisher/HostRainbow History Project
Reenactment of the 1965 Gay Rights Picket at the White House
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Rainbow History Project will reenact the first gay rights picket at the White House. The last surviving picketer will carry his sign!
About this Event

RAINBOW HISTORY PROJECT (RHP) TO REENACT FIRST NATIONAL GAY RIGHTS PICKET

Join RHP to reenact the historic 1965 White House picket on its 60th anniversary in honor of its co-organizer, Dr. Lilli Vincenz, who passed away in 2023. The last surviving picketer, Paul K., will carry a replica of his sign.


WHAT: Historical reenactment of the first picket for gay rights at the White House.

WHEN: April 17, 2025, 4:15pm-5:15pm ET.

WHERE: The White House Sidewalk; Lafayette Square; 1600 Pennsylvania Ave, Washington, DC

WHO: You alongside RHP board members & volunteers, DC community members, and, Paul K., the last surviving participant of the 1965 picket. Picket signs will be provided for interested participants to carry.


This 60th anniversary celebration will mark just over one month until the opening of RHP’s exhibition .



History of the Picket

On April 17, 1965, the Mattachine Society of Washington held the nation’s first picket for gay rights. The picket took place on the White House Sidewalk, Lafayette Park, 1600 Pennsylvania Ave, on April 17, 1965. For exactly one hour, from 4:20 pm to 5:20 pm, members of the Mattachine Society of Washington walked in a circle, non-stop, in silence, carrying posters of their demands. The White House picket is the origin story for public demonstrations for gay rights in the U.S., and the origin story for Pride Marches and the annual LGBTQ Pride celebrations which occur across the globe.

Frank Kameny, Ph.D., was fired by the U.S. Army Map Service in 1957 for being gay, kicking off his life-long battle for LGBTQ rights. He founded the Washington chapter of the Mattachine Society, an early national gay rights organization. Lilli Vincenz, Ph.D., was the first lesbian to join the Mattachine Society of Washington, shortly after she was expelled from the U.S. Army for being gay. The Mattachine Society’s efforts in the early 1960s led to the 1965 White House picket and countless other pickets and media outreach during the late 1960s.

Led by Dr. Kameny and Dr. Vincenz, picketers demanded action on the Mattachine Society’s four major issues: the exclusion of homosexuals from Federal employment; the punitive policies of the U.S. Military; blanket denial of security clearances to gay people; and, government refusal to meet with the LGBTQ community.

“We ask, Mr. President, for what all American citizens – singly and collectively – have the right to ask,” Kameny wrote in a letter to President Lyndon B. Johnson, outlining their demands, “That our problems be given fair, unbiased consideration… consideration in which we, ourselves, are allowed to participate actively and are invited to do so.”

The Rainbow History Project will reenact the historic 1965 White House picket on its 60th anniversary in honor of its co-organizer, Dr. Lilli Vincenz, who passed away in 2023. The reenactment will educate community members and the media on the demands of gay and lesbian activists from the early gay rights movement. RHP’s volunteers will carry replicas of the original protest signs and hand out literature explaining the picket to passersby and tourists. The last surviving picketer will carry a replica of his own poster.

Frank Kameny and Lilli Vincenz participated in the Rainbow History Project’s 2008 picket reenactment. Although Dr. Kameny died in 2011, and Dr. Vincenz in 2023, RHP and its all volunteer corps will picket in their honor and demonstrate there is a new generation of young activists ready to take up their signs and their fight for equal rights for all LGBTQ people.


Rainbow History Project’s mission is to collect, preserve and promote the history and culture of the diverse LGBTQ communities in metropolitan Washington, D.C.

Learn more at



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Event Venue & Nearby Stays

The White House, 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue Northwest, Washington, United States

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