Michael Schofield

From LGBT Archive
(Redirected from Gordon Westwood)
Jump to: navigation, search
Michael Schofield (right) with his partner Anthony Skyrme
Michael Schofield (Michael George Schofield, 1919–2014, also writing as Gordon Westwood) was a pioneer of social research into homosexuality in the 1950s and 1960s, and a campaigner for the Homosexual Law Reform Society at a time before the Sexual Offences Act 1967 partially decriminalised homosexual activity in the UK. He played a prominent role in the law reform lobbies of the 1960s and 1970s. He was the author of many books including Sociological Aspects of Homosexuality (1965) and The Sexual Behaviour of Young People (1965).

Life and work

Michael Schofield was born in Leeds in 1919, the fourth child of Snowden Schofield, the owner of Schofield's, the largest department store in Leeds. He obtained a degree in Psychology at Clare College, Cambridge, where he played clarinet with the Cambridge Footlights Dance band, with Jimmy Edwards on euphonium.

He spent the war years as a fighter pilot in the Royal Air Force, and then studied at Harvard Business School (1946–47). During this time, he identified as homosexual and decided to make an original study of the social aspects of homosexuality. On returning from the USA in 1948 he worked at hisfather's shop (Schofield's of Leeds).

At a time when homosexual activity was a criminal offence, his publisher persuaded him not to publish under his own name (a decision that he later regretted, as it meant he subsequently had to establish himself all over again).[1] His first two books therefore appeared under the pen name of Gordon Westwood.

His first book, Society and the Homosexual, was published in 1952[2] and was the first non-medical book to be written about homosexuality, around the time that several prominent people were being prosecuted for gay offences.[3] Later he came to criticise it for being too defensive, particularly about “causes” of homosexuality.[1]

In 1960 he published A Minority, the first detailed research into the lives of about 130 homosexuals who had not got into trouble with the law and who had not sought medical treatment.[4]

His third and major study was finally published under his own name in 1965 as Sociological Aspects of Homosexuality.[5] In England little of sociological significance had appeared before this, and his work was regularly cited in the debate over law changes. At this time he also became active in the Homosexual Law Reform Society, working with Antony Grey and others.

After these publications he turned his attention to other social issues including single parent families, teenage premarital sex, birth control, abortion, drug taking and prison reform. In 1965 his best known book, The Sexual Behaviour of Young People,[6] was published. This caused a stir, but was also taught in higher education institutions as much for its methodology as its findings. His later books included Social Research (a textbook), The Strange Case of Pot, The Sexual Behaviour of Young Adults, Report of the Committee on the Operation of the Sexual Containment Act. He also wrote many research papers, articles in periodicals and introductions to other books. Schofield spent many years actively supporting various law reform groups. He was a member of the Executive Committee of the National Council for Civil Liberties (now Liberty) for nine years.

He was active in the campaign against censorship and appeared as an expert witness for the defence of several trials in which publications were tried for their alleged obscenity. He also served on the Government Advisory Committee on Drug Dependence (chaired by Barbara Wootton), which published a report on cannabis suggesting that the legal penalties were far too severe. He wrote a minority note for it. On a wider scale, he campaigned to make contraceptives free on the National Health Service and for the Abortion Law Reform Association. He was an early supporter of frank sex education, gay rights and a more tolerant attitude to marital infidelity. He was to be found opposing Mary Whitehouse and her supporters on TV and radio on many occasions, but he made few enemies and many friends.

Michael Schofield had inherited a great deal of money from his father, and used it to set up a charitable foundation called the Lyndhurst Settlement. Between 1968 and 2005 it donated at least three million pounds to small struggling charities, particularly groups working for civil liberties and for the protection of the environment.

In his later years Michael Schofield became very frail, but was looked after with great love and devo-tion by his partner of 61 years, Anthony Skyrme. They had met in 1953 and were among the first couples to have a civil partnership, in 2005.[1]

Michael died in London on 24 June 2014 and was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium on 15 April.[7]

Contributions

Schofield was amongst the very the first researchers to approach homosexuality outside of a medical or legal framework. His concern was to investigate homosexual life as it was lived by ordinary homosexuals in everyday life. At the time homosexuality was a criminal offence, and such research was difficult to conduct. Jeffrey Weeks lists him with Donald West as a "discreet pioneering homosexual researcher."[8] His first book, Society and the Homosexual (1952) was an overview of the topic including early notes on the gay scene in England at that time. His second book, A Minority, was an original survey study of 127 men, and was the first of its kind. He asked them questions on their background, early homosexual experiences, attempts to combat, the extent of their homosexual acts, their work and leisure and their community integration. The third book, Sociological Asopects of Homosexuality (1965), was a comparative study of heterosexuals and homosexuals along three dimensions: in prison, in treatment and others in the community. He concluded:

"Homosexuality is a condition which in itself has only minor effects upon the development of the personality. But the attitudes not of the homosexual but of other people towards this condition, create a stress situation which can have a profound effect upon personality development... A proportion of homosexuals are able to withstand this pressure from outside and become social casualties. These are the homosexuals found most often in prisons and clinics... On the other hand the homosexuals who have learnt to contend with social pressures can become adjusted to their condition and integrated with the community. These men are hardly ever found in prison and clinics."[9]

Ken Plummer, in The Making of the Modern Homosexual remarks that:

"In England little of sociological significance appeared until 1965. Indeed it is tempting to suggest that until that time all the sociological insights, apart from a rather eccentric sociological report prepared for the Home Office in 1958 by Richard Hauser, grew from the work of one man: Michael Schofield, writing under the alias, Gordon Westwood."[10]

A second major contribution was his work, The Sexual Behaviour of Young People (1965). This was one of the earliest surveys of sexual behaviour in the UK and looked at the behaviour of young people. Five years later these same young people were re-interviewed for a follow up in The Sexual Behaviour of Young Adults (1971). Perhaps the most surprising finding of these studies with hindsight is that they reveal the relatively low levels of sexual behaviour of young people at that time. Schofield's work paved the way for much later specialists in the field such as Kaye Wellings.[11] A photographic study by Damien Rudd (Birds of Panic: Sexual Behaviour of Young People) has also been based on it.[12]

Publications 1952-1979

  • Society and the Homosexual (1952)
  • A Minority: Male homosexuality in Great Britain (1960)
  • Sociological Aspects of Homosexuality: A comparative study of three types of homosexuals (1965)
  • The Sexual Behaviour of Young People (1965)
  • Social Research (1969)
  • The Strange Case of Pot (1971)
  • The Sexual Behaviour of Young People (1973)
  • Report of the Committee on the Operation of the Sexual Containment Act (1976)

References

Partly based on the Wikipedia article of the same name.

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Michael Schofield, 1919–2014", CHE Annual Report, 2013–2014
  2. Gordon Westwood, Society and the Homosexual Longmans Green, 1952
  3. Peter Wildeblood Against the Law, 1955
  4. Gordon Westwood A Minority: A Report on the Life of the Male Homosexual in Great Britain Longmans Green, 1980
  5. Michael Schofield|, Sociological Aspects of Homosexuality Longmans 1965
  6. Michael Schofield The Sexual Behaviour of Young People Longmans, 1965
  7. "Memoriam: Michael Schofield Service" (contains the full text of the funeral service). (Archived by WebCite® 2017-11-14.)
  8. Jeffrey Weeks The World We Have Won Routledge, 2007 page 52
  9. Schofield, Sociological Aspects of Homosexuality 1965: p\ge 203
  10. Kenneth Plummer, The Making of the Modern Homosexual Barnes and Noble, New Jersey, 1981 pages=18-19}}
  11. Kay Wellings, "Sexual Behaviour in Young People", Ballieres Clin. Obstet. Gynacol.April 1996, volume=10 issue=1 pages=139–60
  12. Damien Rudd, "Birds of Panic: Sexual Behaviour of Young People".