Integroup: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Ross Burgess (talk | contribs) Created page with "'''Integroup''' was a group intended to bring gay and straight people together. {{stub}} Category:Groups Category:Articles with no pictures" |
m Fix bare <references> tag: MW 1.45.1 Cite requires self-closing <references/> |
||
| (3 intermediate revisions by one other user not shown) | |||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''Integroup''' was a group intended to bring gay and straight people together. | '''Integroup''' was a group intended to bring gay and straight people together. It held its first meeting at the [[Unitarian]] Meeeting House in [[Catford]] in 1970, and was founded by [[Tony Cross]] and others. | ||
:"My hope then and now is that, with our diverse sexualities and identities, we can connect with each other, thereby not only enriching our experience but also ensuring a more peaceable social order."<ref name=connect>Tony Cross, "Only Connect: | |||
Promoting Gay/Straight integration in the 1960s and 1970s – a personal contribution to Gay History", ''Faith & Freedom'' (vol.68 pt. 1. pp. 10-21).</ref> | |||
The original Catford Integroup folded in 1973, but other Integroups, notably in [[Golders Green]], outlasted it by some years.<ref name=connect /> | |||
{{stub}} | {{stub}} | ||
==References== | |||
<references/> | |||
[[Category:Groups]] | [[Category:Groups]] | ||
[[Category:Articles with no pictures]] | [[Category:Articles with no pictures]] | ||
Latest revision as of 13:07, 10 July 2026
Integroup was a group intended to bring gay and straight people together. It held its first meeting at the Unitarian Meeeting House in Catford in 1970, and was founded by Tony Cross and others.
- "My hope then and now is that, with our diverse sexualities and identities, we can connect with each other, thereby not only enriching our experience but also ensuring a more peaceable social order."[1]
The original Catford Integroup folded in 1973, but other Integroups, notably in Golders Green, outlasted it by some years.[1]
- This article is a stub. You can help the UK LGBT History Project by expanding it.