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Change Your Day

A revitalized blog with one mission: to present a moment that jolts your day, triggers new thinking, gets you through traffic tangles, and relieves job stress. Or, more prosaically, accompanies you through the early miles of bike touring through France and Italy. Wherever you are, I aim to change your day.

Credit to @illuminatethearts for lighting the skies from the Ferry Building down Market Street. 

How Arizona Reminded Me of Paris

3/26/2019

 
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Going to Arizona last month relatively soon after major back surgery – and with my neurosurgeon’s approval -- reminded me of an episode 26 years ago when I astounded my doctor with my travel plans.  

“You want to go to Paris now, in the winter, after having PCP?” he asked. “It’s going to be cold and wet. Couldn’t you go somewhere south, somewhere it’s dry and warm?”

It was mid-November 1993, and I had just beaten a bout of the often deadly AIDS-related pneumonia. After ve days in the hospital, I was discharged to ten days of IV treatment at home.

A few days later I was proposing to my doctor a long flight to Europe where my lungs would be subjected to the cold, fog, and rain. I explained that my partner at the time had his heart set on celebrating his 40th birthday in his favorite city. My doctor relented with warnings to stay warm and dry and avoid long exposure outdoors. (I’ve always thought he agreed partly thinking I should do what made me happy given my overall prognosis. Unexpectedly, I became a long-term HIV survivor). 

So off we went on the day after Thanksgiving for nine days in Paris. It WAS cold and wet and I stayed indoors more than usual. The city was amazing in winter. We were grateful to be staying   in a large, warm and cozy apartment in a 400-year-old building on the Ile St. Louis. 

Back to last month and Arizona. My husband, Dale Danley, and I had planned this trip long before my diagnosis of disk degeneration. The surgery went well, but a fair degree of nerve pain had yet to resolve. We knew travel would be uncomfortable for me and that our long hikes would be curtailed. I was good for about a mile with a cane. But it was Arizona, sunshine and warm days. Or so we thought.

Our first night it snowed. The next morning the temp was 26 degrees. Our windshield was covered with ice. I scraped some of it off with the end of my cane. We were so not ready. We had debated at home how many T shirts and shorts we’d need.

But we had a wonderful trip visiting longtime friends in Sedona and in the tiny town of Clarkdale before settling in Tucson at a sprawling luxe hotel where a Leadership Conference for LGBTQ choruses was convened. Dale attended sessions while I walked around the compound, spent time in the fitness room, and slept a lot. I loved being in the desert again.

Would You Celebrate Women’s Suffrage If You Had Lost the Right to Free Speech?

6/27/2018

 
What would Marie Equi do?  Would she be getting ready to celebrate in 2020 the centennial of women finally getting the vote? In states across the U.S. women today are planning to honor the thousands of suffragists who persisted and finally won suffrage in 1920. Yet Marie Equi, a longtime suffragist and political agitator, was in a far different situation from her feminist colleagues when the 19th amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified. She was a few months from doing time in San Quentin prison after being convicted for sedition. Specifically, her offense was publicly voicing her opposition to the war. She exercised what she thought was her right to free speech and gave talks describing the war as a capitalist, imperialist venture in which working-class people would suffer the most.

Earlier this year I was invited to imagine how Marie Equi might have reacted to the news of women getting the vote in 1920. Desiree Root, a senior Gender Studies student and assistant in Professor Kimberly Jensen’s Honors Colloquium at Western Oregon University, conducted the discussion. It was published with other interviews as part of the Oregon Women’s History Consortium, a statewide organization that supports research and education about the history of women in Oregon. You can read my interview here. 

Intrigued with this fiercely independent woman, physician, agitator, and one of the first publicly known lesbians on the West Coast?  Check my website  michaelhelquist.com and look for my biography “Marie Equi: Radical Politics & Outlaw Passions,” Oregon State University Press, at bookstores and online retail sites.
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Marie Equi, inmate at San Quentin prison, Easter Sunday; Oregon Historical Society
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National Park Service Honors Marie Equi during LGBTQ Pride Month

6/20/2018

 
For the first time, the New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park of the National Park Service is recognizing LGBTQ Pride during the month of June.  The inaugural Pride exhibit features Dr. Marie Equi, the longtime agitator for social and economic justice who spent her early years, 1872 to 1892, in New Bedford along the southeast coast of Massachusetts. The exhibit, curated by Aneshia Savino, presents descriptions and photos of Marie Equi with five primary themes from her life as an Activist, Daughter, Doctor, Lesbian, and Mother. Participants at the exhibit’s opening night were offered pins with Equi’s likeness to wear.
 
Born in 1872 on Second Street along New Bedford’s famed whaling waterfront, Equi was the fifth child and fifth daughter of John Equi, and Italian immigrant from Tuscany, and Sarah Mullins, and Irish immigrant from County Tyrone, Ireland. Four additional children followed. She attended grade school in New Bedford but had to drop out of high school to work in local textile mills to help support the family. Equi later homesteaded in Oregon, self-studied her way into medical school, and became an early woman physician in Portland.
 
Equi was a strong advocate of women’s rights. She used her professional standing to help drive the campaign for woman suffrage. She also believed in reproductive rights and was jailed with birth control advocate Margaret Sanger for distributing pamphlets about limiting family size. Her passion for justice also led her to provide abortions to her patients. She protested unjust working conditions for laborers and aligned herself with the radical labor union, the Industrial Workers of the World.  She objected to World War I and lectured against unfair wartime measures.
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Although no organized LGBT community existed at the time on the West Coast, Equi lived openly with women in intimate relationships. In 1915 she and her lover, Harriet Speckart, adopted an infant together in what was one of the first occasions when a publicly known lesbian legally adopted a child.
 
Marie Equi had been little known in her hometown of New Bedford until the last few years. When I took my book tour to the city and to the greater Boston area, local enthusiasts asked why they had never heard of her.  I spoke at the New Bedford Public Library, the Rotch-Jones-Duff House & Garden Museum, and was interviewed on 1420 WBSM radio. I’m excited that Marie Equi is receiving more recognition in her home town and in Massachusetts and that the National Park Service has recognized her historical significance.
 
The Marie Equi exhibit continues through June.  The New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park office (with the exhibit) is located at 33 William Street, New Bedford; open from 9am to 5pm Sunday through Saturday, closed on Wednesdays. (508) 996-4095 for more information.

For more about Marie Equi, see the website marieequi.com and check out my biography “Marie Equi: Radical Politics & Outlaw Passions,” at Amazon and other online book outlets and local bookstores.

Once little known in her hometown, Marie Equi to be honored

3/16/2018

 
During our September 2016 book tour in Massachusetts for Marie Equi: Radical Politics and Outlaw Passions, our protagonist was hardly known. Audiences at book talks in Boston and elsewhere invariably asked, “Why have we never heard of her before?” Even in Marie Equi’s hometown of New Bedford, relatively few were familiar with the early physician and political agitator who spent her early years in the city. That’s about to change even more.
 
Dale Danley and I brought the story of Equi’s fierce independence and commitment to social and economic justice to the New Bedford Public Library, radio station WBSM, and the historic Rotch Jones Duff House. The New Bedford area’s South Coast Today published feature articles written by Lauren Daley about Equi and the new biography. Earlier this month the same news site announced the launch of a comprehensive, interactive history project to unearth the remarkable stories of women from New Bedford’s past. Marie Equi will be highlighted among these women “who shaped local history.”
 
The project, known as “Lighting the Way: Historic Women of the South Coast,” will feature profiles of 90 women on a website and an app to guide followers on an historic walking trail through downtown New Bedford with stops at more than 30 landmarks that feature women’s stories. (Marie Equi’s nearby birthplace will be noted in the walk). Later a curriculum will be developed for area schools. Then in 2020, the anniversary of the nation’s adopting woman suffrage, the group plans to exhibit the historic women’s lives in public art displays. The New Bedford Whaling Museum has spearheaded the “Lighting the Way” project.
 
See Lauren Daley's article for SouthCoastToday:
http://www.southcoasttoday.com/news/20180305/lighting-way-group-sheds-light-on-southcoast-women
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​Resistance and Dissent: Sedition Arrests in World War I Oregon

3/15/2018

 
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Much of Oregon’s populace rallied to make the state one of the most patriotic in the nation during the World War I era, but what about the other Oregonians, those who objected to, or merely criticized, America’s engagement?  They were subject to harassment, ostracism, and charges of sedition.

Michael Helquist, author of Marie Equi: Radical Politics and Outlaw Passions, will recount the stories of the nearly 100 Oregonians arrested under the federal sedition law during a talk at the Eugene Public Library, 100 W. 10th Av; Saturday, March 31, at 2pm – 3:30 pm. The event is free and open to the public. Copies of his award-winning biography of Marie Equi, the only woman in Oregon convicted of sedition, will be available for purchase and signing. 

Christmas Eve Protest, 1913

12/19/2017

 
 Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the halls
Many a man was grumbling, ignoring the warning calls;
Their protests hung in the air, in hopes that justice would soon be there.
For no matter the eve of the Nativity,
One of their own was held in captivity
What was Marie Equi doing in jail on Christmas Eve? She felt she had no other choice with a blatant injustice inflicted upon those whose cause she championed. Here’s what went down:

“While many Portlanders spent the day before Christmas in 1913 preparing for the holiday, Equi learned that unemployed men arrested for demanding food and lodging were being relegated to the rock pile. She rushed to the courthouse, where she found the judge mumbling the sentences. When she asked him three times to speak louder, he gave her a five-day fine for contempt of court. She tried to shame him with the news that the old man he had sentenced the day before had died after only a few hours’ busting rocks. For her impertinence, the judge increased her jail time. She refused to post the bail offered by her supporters.

“Equi spent a few hours in jail before the judge offered to release her if she apologized. She declined. The Christmas Eve standoff was resolved only when hundreds of men – “her army,” the newspapers reported – packed the courtroom and hallways with a low, grumbling protest over the holding of the woman who had stood up for them. The judge relented and freed Equi. Although the dailies reported that Equi had apologized first, Helen Lawrence Walters, a Bohemian artist and socialist familiar with the incident, advised in her journal, “Don’t believe it.”

Excerpted from Marie Equi: Radical Politics and Outlaw Passions
by Michael Helquist, OSU Press, 2015.

Shopping for the holidays? Find Marie Equi at bookstores and online, in print and digital formats including Kindle on Amazon. 
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Mock-up of Marie Equi Honor Plaque Unveiled in San Francisco

12/6/2017

 
The official mock-up of Marie Equi’s plaque for San Francisco’s Rainbow Honor Walk was unveiled last month during a presentation by author Michael Helquist (Marie Equi: Radical Politics and Outlaw Passions). The rendering reveals Equi’s likeness, her signature, and a description of her efforts to achieve a more just society. In spring 2018 the 3’ by 3’ bronze plaque will be installed in the sidewalk along Market Street, San Francisco’s primary thoroughfare, as part of a tribute to deceased LGBTQ individuals worldwide who made significant contributions to their fields.   

Equi will join a stellar group of nearly three dozen individuals who have already been recognized with plaques, ranging from activists Bayard Rustin, Harry Hay, and Jane Addams; artists Frida Kahlo and Keith Haring, authors Virginia Woolf, Yukio Mishima, Oscar Wilde, Gertrude Stein, Tennessee Williams, and Federico Garcia Lorca; scientist Alan Turing, singer Sylvester James, and Jose Sarria, founder of the Imperial Court System.

The Rainbow Honor Walk is an all-volunteer project based in San Francisco’s LGBTQ community. Begun in 2011, the organization funds production and placement of the bronze plaques through community outreach and private donations. (Each plaque costs about $5000).  The City and County of San Francisco collaborates with planning and installation and the city’s art commission approved the design. Artist Carlos Casuso of Madrid, Spain was selected to design the plaques following an international design competition. The first 24 plaques were installed mostly along Castro Street in the city’s LGBTQ neighborhood, then organizers extended the route on either side of Market Street with the next batch of twenty-four plaques.  

In November 2017 Helquist and historian Paula Lichtenberg presented a talk at the GLBT Historical Society in San Francisco that illustrated the shift in the general public’s attitudes toward same-sex intimate relationships from the late 1890s to the 1920s. Helquist referred to the Oregon public’s general acceptance of Marie Equi’s relationship with her companion Bessie Holcomb in the mid-1890s contrasted with the harsh disapproval she encountered during a public inheritance dispute involving her intimate companion in Portland in 1906.

Although Marie Equi’s reputation extends far beyond the Pacific Northwest, she was not particularly well-known in San Francisco’s activist, women’s and LGBTQ communities. Her recent biography significantly changed that.  

For more information on Marie Equi see michaelhelquist.com and for the Rainbow Honor Walk (including bios of the first round of honorees) see rainbowhonorwalk.org, 

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San Francisco honors 8 new LGBTQ heroes w bronze plaques installed in sidewalks. https://t.co/m7eflXIJTV for the Rainbow Honor Walk project.

— Michael Helquist (@MHelquistWriter) November 9, 2017

#virginiawoolf #rainbowhonorwalk #castro □ ♀

A post shared by Caroline Nord (@nord_caroline) on Feb 9, 2016 at 4:24pm PST

Michael Helquist (MARIE EQUI) talk in San Francisco, Nov 8 2017

11/5/2017

 
When did Americans turn against the "Romantic Friendships" enjoyed by many women couples in the mid-19th century and early 20th century?

These were intimate, and often sexual, associations between pairs of women, especially those who were independent by means of their professions or personal wealth. In the late 1890s and early 1900s, sexologists identified homosexuality and often diagnosed them as individuals with aberrant, transgressive behaviors. The public began to reject these previously "normal" associations as unhealthy, dangerous, and even criminal.

Dr. Marie Equi and heiress Harriet Speckart of Portland and Dr. Mary Sperry and attorney Gail Laughlin of San Francisco are two early 20th century couples confronted with this more hostile public attitude.

Michael Helquist, biographer of Marie Equi, and Paula Lichtenberg, independent scholar and curator of "Faces From the Past," a new exhibit at the GLBT History Museum in San Francisco, will describe how Equi-Speckart and Sperry-Laughlin were subjected to vile charges of inappropriate behavior and maligned in the press and in court trials.

The talk will be presented Wednesday, November 8, 2017, 7 - 9pm at the GLBT History Museum, 4127 18th Street, San Francisco. Admission: $5; free for members.

An added attraction for the talk is the unveiling of the prototype for the MARIE EQUI bronze plaque that will become part of the Rainbow Honor Walk in the Castro and Upper Market districts. The plaques are embedded in the neighborhoods' sidewalks to honor LGBTQ individuals, now deceased, who have made significant contributions to freedom, justice and the arts.

Copies of Marie Equi: Radical Politics and Outlaw Passions, Oregon State University Press, 2015, will be available for purchase and signing by the author.
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Harriet Speckart. Photo courtesy Oregon Historical Society
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Marie Equi. Photo courtesy Oregon Historical Society
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Dr. Mary Sperry
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Gail Laughlin
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Powerful Stuff: Reading Your Book for a Live Audience

6/1/2017

 
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Actor and author Jeffrey Tambor recently exalted the effect of authors reading their books out loud in a bookstore. “It’s theater,” he remarked in a New York Times interview. “Different venues – same goal – as E.M. Forster wrote, ‘Connect! …Only connect.’”
 
The connection between author and readers can be powerful and transformative. I’ve presented my biography of the early woman physician and political radical Marie Equi for dozens of gatherings. Each time I feel that I’m performing with the words, phrases and rhythms that survived a steady stream of  revisions.
 
I get an extra charge from knowing I’m presenting the life of a remarkable but little-known woman. Audiences often allow me privileged access to their own inner lives – their appreciation for my protagonist or their disinterest, their sharing a laugh with the person next to them or their close following of the obstacles my character encountered. Sometimes I witness eyes widening, smiles broadening, and heads nodding with affirmation.
 
Often the Q and A is the best part of an author event. This is a time when the connection between author and reader becomes more immediate, spontaneous, and personal. I can embellish my story-telling, and I gain insight into what intrigued listeners. I often wait for a question never before asked. At my most recent reading, an older woman inquired how I felt as a man writing the biography of a woman and why I was drawn to do so. In my response, I disclosed more about myself, how I identified with Marie Equi’s outsider status and her overcoming many obstacles. My connection with listeners and readers became more intimate and powerful.
 
I look forward to more book readings with their draw of theater and performance and the chance to connect.

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Marie Equi, Radical Politics and Outlaw Passions, Oregon State University Press. 
At your bookstore and online outlets.
Coming soon in eBook edition.

​WWI Oregon – 18 Counties & 24 Cities Reported Sedition

5/24/2017

 
One hundred years ago, in the spring of 1917, Oregon authorities began arresting and prosecuting a remarkable number of residents suspected of sedition. This hyper-vigilant campaign in the state complied with Congress’ demand to rid the country of any dissent that might impede the war effort. Anyone could report suspicious or disloyal talk. And they did.   
 
From May 1917 through November 1918, nearly 100 Oregonians were arrested for “disloyal utterances.” The arrests swept up wealthy farmers and business leaders, ranch hands and railway workers, attorneys and physicians, a small-town postmaster, and radical union members. Many had simply made casual remarks that disagreed with the war, the draft, or the many war drives that effectively required residents to support. Dozens more residents were investigated by federal agents, interrogated, and advised to watch what they said in public or in private.
 
Eighteen of Oregon’s 36 counties reported seditious incidents that led to arrests, as indicated in the attached state map. One-third occurred in Central and Eastern Oregon counties with two-thirds from Portland-area counties, several in the Willamette Valley, and others in Southwest Oregon. Notice that Lane County, home to considerable anti-war dissent later in the 20th century, registered no arrests. Seditious acts were reported in 24 Oregon cities, ranging from the state’s largest to several of the smallest. (See list).

Sedition Incidents Reported in 18 Oregon Counties

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Sedition Incidents Reported in 24 Oregon Communities

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For the first time, these sedition arrests have been documented and compiled as part of my research into the WWI experience in Oregon. The data reflect published reports in the Oregonian newspaper, the state’s largest. The editors were diligent in reporting every seditious incident that came to public notice throughout the state.

​More findings are posted on my website:  
http://www.michaelhelquist.com/wwi-sedition-project.html
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Marie Equi: Radical Politics and Outlaw Passions, Michael Helquist, Oregon State University Press. Available online and in bookstores. Paperback. Coming Soon: eBook edition.  
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Note: Marie Equi was the only Oregon woman convicted of sedition.
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