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:"It seemed to me a total injustice that simply because of your sexual inclinations you should be criminalised."<ref>Interviewed by [[Peter Scott-Presland]], January 2012. Quoted in ''[[Amiable Warriors]]'' Volume One, page 128.</ref>
:"It seemed to me a total injustice that simply because of your sexual inclinations you should be criminalised."<ref>Interviewed by [[Peter Scott-Presland]], January 2012. Quoted in ''[[Amiable Warriors]]'' Volume One, page 128.</ref>


Around 1966 she conducted a personal campaign around the industrial firms in the Trafford Park estate in Manchester, visiting firms' welfare officers, and asking them to support the campaign for decriminalisation.<ref>''[[Amiable Warriors]]'' Volume One, page 129–130.</ref>
Around 1966 she conducted a personal campaign around the industrial firms in the Trafford Park estate in Manchester, visiting firms' welfare officers, and asking them to support the campaign for decriminalisation.<ref>''[[Amiable Warriors]]'' Volume One, pages 129–130.</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 10:58, 14 April 2015

Meg Elizabeth Atkins, about 1980

Meg Elizabeth Atkins (died 2013) was a novelist and an active member of the North Western Homosexual Law Reform Committee (NWHLRC).

Meg Atkins was born in Essex and worked as a stable hand before moving to Manchester where she worked as a secretary, flitting between jobs to support her writing. Later she became a full-time writer, living with her husband in Lincolnshire.[1] Her early novel Gemini (which she later repudiated as an apprentice effort) has a gay theme. Later she specialised in crime fiction, with her series character DCI Sheldon.[2] She is perhaps best known for Palimpsest and Cruel as the Grave.[3]

Although heterosexual and married, she got involved in the North Western Committee because her best friend was a gay man:

"It seemed to me a total injustice that simply because of your sexual inclinations you should be criminalised."[4]

Around 1966 she conducted a personal campaign around the industrial firms in the Trafford Park estate in Manchester, visiting firms' welfare officers, and asking them to support the campaign for decriminalisation.[5]

References

<references>