Difference between revisions of "Paul Patrick"

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Paul Patrick was born in [[South Shields]] and studied English and drama at the Philippa Fawcett College, [[Streatham]]. In the 1970s he became almost certainly the first openly gay teacher in Britain to not only keep his job, but to get promoted.<ref name=guardian>Carole Woodis, "Paul Patrick obituary", ''The Guardian'', 6 June 2008</ref>
 
Paul Patrick was born in [[South Shields]] and studied English and drama at the Philippa Fawcett College, [[Streatham]]. In the 1970s he became almost certainly the first openly gay teacher in Britain to not only keep his job, but to get promoted.<ref name=guardian>Carole Woodis, "Paul Patrick obituary", ''The Guardian'', 6 June 2008</ref>
  
In 1974, while teaching in  [[Lewisham]],  he co-founded the [[London Gay Teachers Group]]. In 1981 this became Schools Out, which he co-chaired with a longtime friend and work colleague, [[Sue Sanders]], from 2002.<ref name=guardian /> In 2004 Paul Patrick and Sue Sanders set up LGBT History Month.
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In 1974, while teaching in  [[Lewisham]],  he co-founded the [[London Gay Teachers Group]]. In 1981 this became Schools OUT, which he co-chaired with a longtime friend and work colleague, [[Sue Sanders]], from 2002.<ref name=guardian /> In 2004 Paul Patrick and Sue Sanders set up LGBT History Month.
  
 
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Revision as of 19:01, 29 November 2013

Paul Patrick
Paul Patrick (1950–2008) was a teacher and co-chair of Schools OUT and of LGBT History Month.

Paul Patrick was born in South Shields and studied English and drama at the Philippa Fawcett College, Streatham. In the 1970s he became almost certainly the first openly gay teacher in Britain to not only keep his job, but to get promoted.[1]

In 1974, while teaching in Lewisham, he co-founded the London Gay Teachers Group. In 1981 this became Schools OUT, which he co-chaired with a longtime friend and work colleague, Sue Sanders, from 2002.[1] In 2004 Paul Patrick and Sue Sanders set up LGBT History Month.

References

This article is a stub. You can help the UK LGBT History Project by expanding it.
  1. 1.0 1.1 Carole Woodis, "Paul Patrick obituary", The Guardian, 6 June 2008