Heroic in Perversity

Originally appeared in the Times of London, November 20, 1999.

Peter Wildeblood, diplomatic correspondent for a British newspaper, was convicted and imprisoned in 1954 for homosexual relations, his case a cause c?l?bre in the United Kingdom. His real crime was that he refused to be ashamed.


"I DID NOT BELIEVE such things could happen in England, until they happened to me." Thus wrote Peter Wildeblood 44 years ago, his name then a household word. He died last week in Vancouver, aged 76, forgotten. Today I doubt whether one Briton in a thousand would know a thing about him.

Our obituary page this Tuesday summed up accurately if bleakly: "In March 1954 Peter Wildeblood, then diplomatic correspondent of the Daily Mail, was sentenced to 18 months' imprisonment for homosexual offences, together with Lord Montagu of Beaulieu and Major Michael Pitt-Rivers. The Montagu case, as it came to be known, was a cause c?l?bre. It had a direct influence on the Wolfenden Committee, whose report in 1957 recommended that homosexual acts between consenting adults in private be legalised, proposals which were finally passed into law in 1967."

I learnt the name of the man who had exercised so profound an influence on my own and others' lives three years ago, when asked to review for The Times a somewhat luridly entitled book, Heterosexual Dictatorship. The book, a study of male homosexuality in postwar Britain, by Patrick Higgins, proved careful and scholarly - and gripping. Wildeblood irritates Dr Higgins, as he irritated many of his contemporaries, but his story is recounted fairly.

He did not irritate me. So when, earlier this year, the publishers Weidenfeld & Nicolson asked me to write a new preface to Wildeblood's book, I was eager to read it.

Against the Law, first published by Weidenfeld in 1955, had long fallen out of print. It caused a sensation in its time. Even The Daily Telegraph of the day thought it "a very courageous, honest book which can do a great deal of good," though public libraries declined to stock the book, while many bookshops kept it out of sight.

Weidenfeld has republished now as part of its 50th anniversary - as it turned out, almost on the day the author died.

Though undoubtedly a partial account (and though, like Higgins, I doubt Wildeblood's conspiracy theories) the story is remarkable. Remarkable, of course, for the tale it tells of arrests, harassments and police persecution; of the trial and of the imprisonment in Wormwood Scrubs which followed. But more remarkable for the snapshot it gives us of attitudes to homosexuality in 1950s Britain, a world in which the judge in the trial, summing up to the jury, could call Wildeblood's (seized) correspondence "nauseating" and imply that anyone who admitted to being homosexual was so vile that the chances were that he was a criminal as well.

The case involved consensual behaviour of an unexceptional kind between adults, all over 21, in private, at Beaulieu. That one of the accused, Wildeblood, was not prepared to slink off into the release of the shadows afterwards but determined to tell his story in an unashamed way, was considered incredible. This book made publishing history - and as late as 1955, when half my readers today will have been alive. It was not long ago, yet almost another world. That is what is most remarkable of all.

"That night, a woman spat at me," Wildeblood wrote. "She was a respectable looking, middle-aged, tweedy person wearing a sensible felt hat. She was standing on the pavement as the car went by. I saw her suck in her cheeks, and the next moment a big blob of spit was running down the windscreen.

"This shocked me very much. The woman did not look eccentric or evil; in fact she looked very much like the country gentlewomen with whom my mother used to take coffee when she has finished her shopping on Saturday mornings. She looked thoroughly ordinary, to me. But what did I look like to her? Evidently, I was a monster."

Around this time, the Daily Mirror printed a photograph of Wildeblood, his lips touched up by the newspaper to make him appear to be wearing lipstick. What so troubled the Establishment of the day was not that homosexual practices went on - everybody knew they always had and always would - but that anybody would openly declare himself to be "a homosexual." At the time (Patrick Higgins explains) the ruling wisdom on these matters was a kind of pseudo-science. Once discredited, science is always renamed "pseudo-science," but it seemed as solid then as our science on social questions - such as drugs - may be today.

According to that science, a homosexual act was something into which almost any man might fall if exposed to what experts believed could become an epidemic unless suppressed. Those who did sometimes fall were called "perverts." A smaller group (it was held) were born homosexuals with no potential to be heterosexual, and were the victims of a sort of medical misfortune. Such unfortunates were classified as "inverts." There was some sympathy for inverts, none for perverts, these latter being in some sense the spreaders of the rot.

To such a view, outgoing Peter Wildeblood, willing to trumpet his sexuality and (worse) to claim that there were many like him, and to speak the language of rights, was an infuriating phenomenon.

Sir John Wolfenden did not care for him at all. The name Wolfenden has become associated with liberal reform but from Higgins's scrupulous account of the Wolfenden Committee's work, Sir John emerges as a cold and ambitious man with an eye to the main chance. He and his committee, charged with reviewing the law on homosexuality and prostitution, found it distasteful to name either, so, taking their cue from a biscuit of the same name, dubbed the objects of their inquiry "Huntleys" and "Palmers."

"What about our Huntleys," Wolfenden wrote to the secretary of his committee, "...they are not likely to come as official witnesses and if they did they would hardly be at their best when cross-examined by a committee." But he did want some of his committee to talk to some Huntleys, off the record, about their lives.

Wildeblood (now out of prison, his book published) wanted to talk on the record. A reluctant Wolfenden conceded. Nobody knows (though I doubt it) whether Wildeblood's evidence itself influenced the final report as much as his earlier trial and book had, by troubling public opinion, influenced the climate which triggered the whole inquiry.

Wolfenden's son, Jeremy, admired Wildeblood and it is said they later became friends. Before winning a scholarship to Oxford, Jeremy had told his father he was gay. John Wolfenden was horrified, writing to suggest "we stay out of each other's way for the time being." Jeremy died, probably of alcoholism, about twelve years later.

These are strange tales. Wildeblood and Wolfenden are gone. Other figures - Kenneth Tynan, who acted as surety for the arrested Wildeblood; Peter Rawlinson, his defence counsel; John Gielgud, whose own trial in 1953 stirred public anxiety alongside Wildeblood's; Lord Longford, who greeted him from prison; Lord Montagu himself - flourished into a new age.

For a while Wildeblood enjoyed something of a second career as a scriptwriter, but never shook off the suspicion that he had been a bit of an attention-seeker. His last years were spent, after a stroke, quadriplegic and speechless. The modern gay establishment has been no kinder to him than the 1950s, regarding his plea for tolerance for "good" homosexuals as Uncle Tomism. Like so many human bridges between eras, he is charged with insurrection by the old, dismissed as a compromiser by the new.

And attention-seeking? The same words were chosen by Alastair Campbell to describe me last year when I mentioned something known but for some stupid reason not acknowledged about Peter Mandelson.

Attention-seeking is what irritates us about Peter Tatchell. It is an often unlikeable quality, but I wonder where many just causes would be without it?

In saluting Peter Wildeblood I prefer to remember the courage which accompanied the self-advertisement. Everyone counselled silence, and he chose noise. He did not choose to be exposed but, placed at the mercy of events, he chose to become their master.

His book was a voluntary act. "Very faintly," he wrote, "as though at the end of a tunnel, I could see what I must do. I would make a statement ... I would simply tell the truth about myself ... I would be the first homosexual to tell what it felt like to be an exile in one's own country. I might destroy myself, but perhaps I could help others."

Peter Wildeblood had a difficult life. I would like to think I might have spoken in his cause even at the risk of being called an attention-seeker. From one attention-seeker to another, Peter, rest in peace.

Letting History Speak for Itself

Originally appeared August 31, 1992, in National Review.

Review. In refreshing contrast to the ideological and personal axe-grinding found in so much gay history, Eric Marcus's Making History: The Struggle for Gay and Lesbian Equal Rights allows his subjects to speak eloquently for themselves. One lesson: A free-market democracy like America's, though it may officially have inculcated moral teachings that were conservative in the extreme, has unleashed practical social dynamics that were revolutionary in allowing millions to come to terms with their sexual natures.


THE WORD "important" is dropped into reviews as pretentiously and often these days as phrases like "hugely entertaining" and "profoundly true." I have hardly used such expressions before, and never together. But Making History is true, entertaining, and important in most unusual measure.

Interviewing 45 utterly different Americans, who since 1945 have been involved in utterly different ways in raising the status of homosexuals, Eric Marcus has used his background in television journalism to good effect, but combined it with a patience and an honesty for which only written literature has time. The reader is permitted to sit down quietly with each individual and listen to him, or her, telling his own story in his own words.

We are allowed entirely to forget Marcus, yet his labor has been enormous. Each of his subjects is briefly but beautifully described in an introduction which sets the individual in context and gives us a simple sketch of the person and scene. Thus:

The room ... was filled with the delightful songs of her many pet birds. Shirley's hair is mostly grey and cut in a flattop style. She looked out from behind thick, black-rimmed glasses and spoke in a deep, smoky voice. As she talked about her past, her eyes often filled with tears.

My admiration for the way Marcus introduces us to his acquaintances, then leaves them alone with us, is enormous. He does not try to be smart and he does not judge. In a field riven by personal bitterness, stupid ideological disputes, and the sound of grinding axes, this educated neutrality - judicious almost to the point of being curt - is water in the desert.

We talk to a woman who, as a young secretary in 1945, aware of her feelings for other women but quite unaware how far she was part of any great category or movement, started to type her own little "newsletters" of a rather innocent kind, making as many copies as the carbon would permit, and sending them to friends, who would send them to others.

We talk to ex-nun Jean O'Leary: "I was always in love at the convent... I had eight relationships while I was there. God was an innocent bystander ..."; to drag-queens and Communists; to a conservative congressman and a sports coach whose careers were wrecked by their homosexuality; to schoolteachers who do not want to be named; and to a black attorney, alone now and elderly, playing the organ in his living room: "He talked about his past shyly and always with a mixture of pain and wonderment." Some are strange, some so very familiar. Some are cocky and carefree; others speak through clenched teeth. There is a sort of pervasive melancholy, but also an unfocused hope for the future.

You will see from the handful mentioned above how various are Marcus's choices. He has most emphatically not made this a Who's Who of self-appointed gay "community" leaders, thank God, and many of his choices are individuals quite unheard of. What separates them, in age, background, and outlook, gives sparkle to these pages. But what links them? What thoughts emerge with any insistence from so unusual a miscellany?

To this reader, the first lesson is the utter inefficacy of education, propaganda, newspaper headlines, and received wisdom in changing what people are. Readers of a conservative disposition will share my delight in the way the collapse of Communism has shown George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four thesis to be untrue: Half a century of ruthlessly concerted mind-control never went (we now realize) more than an inch deep. Well, my conservative friends, it turns out that what is true in matters commercial and political is true in matters sexual, too. This book will remind the middle-aged how nothing we were allowed to read or hear when we were young portrayed homosexuality as anything other than the wicked and destructive perversion of a tiny minority. Every contributor to this book was immersed in that. And do you know they never believed a word of it?

That is the second lesson of this anthology: Though the moral teachings of a free-market democracy were conservative in the extreme, the practical dynamics of the society it created were revolutionary. Virtually every speaker in the book agrees that it was the freedom to leave home, to make your own living in your own way in the place of your choice, that allowed him to come to terms with his homosexuality. In the West, Marxist voices were siding with sexual freedom, conservative voices with sexual orthodoxy: yet in the East, Marxist systems were imposing that orthodoxy. Western conservatives were fostering societies in which what they called perversion could flourish. The irony is delicious. In the West we see the importance of allowing anti-gay sentiment its own institutions, its own voices: we hear it, and choose our response. Under Communism, silence: no voice, no choice, just the most terrible repression.

A third lesson concerns the disgraceful record of medical and psychiatric science in this evolving story. Marcus interviews Dr. Evelyn Hooker, who reminds us that in the Fifties every authority in psychology and medicine agreed that homosexuality disordered the personality - and nobody so much as bothered to test the assertion. She did, and with a very simple method. Using her profession's own tests for 'balance" in personality, she presented to a panel of professional colleagues the profiles of each of sixty cases. Thirty were homosexuals, thirty were heterosexuals. She asked the panel to "score" each case, without telling them which were which. The resultant scores showed no difference between the two.

What is so worrying here - and other interviews in the book confirm it - is not that scientists' beliefs are influenced by the mores of their age, but that their science is so supine in the face of them. Many will conclude from Marcus's story that scientific truth has finally triumphed over the conventional moral wisdom. My own conclusion is that the conventional moral wisdom has changed, and science has followed it. I draw from this story the moral not that medical science was a slave to fashion, but that all science is.

This bears upon another observation. Insistent throughout these vignettes is the wish to believe that one was "born" homosexual. Again and again that conviction is stated. I make no judgment on the facts: research has yet to determine the controversy. I remark only on the wish of many of us who are gay that it be determined one way rather than the other. Why one should want to conclude that any trait "couldn't be helped" I leave it to others to speculate, myself suspecting that it has something to do with defensiveness. Medical science has begun to find "evidence" of sexual predetermination. Distrust it this time, as you should have done last time.

Justifying his admirably non-celebrity-oriented selection, Eric Marcus quotes Lytton Strachey:

It is not by the direct method of scrupulous narration that the explorer of the past can hope to depict that singular epoch. If he is wise, he will adopt a subtler strategy. He will attack his subject in unexpected places. ... He will shoot a sudden, revealing searchlight into obscure recesses. ... He will row out over that great ocean of material, and lower down into it, here and there, a little bucket, which will bring up to the light of day some characteristic specimen, from those far depths, to be examined with a careful curiosity.

In this, Mr. Marcus has succeeded. Both in its field and among a wider audience this book will prove compulsive reading.

As will Neil Miller's impressive Out in the World. This is not a homosexual guide to foreign holidays, but a dipping down of that same little bucket into scenes of homosexual life from countries all over the world.

Miller is a journalist and he knows how to write: coolly, sometimes skeptically, often humorously, with an eye always to the salient. His description of the blank incomprehension he met in Egypt when he tried to suggest there was such a thing as "a gay man," to men for whom sodomizing each other was one of the commonplaces of life, lives in the memory. His account of a gay bar in Tokyo in which a customer sat, coat and tie adjusted, while a hospital-ward-style screen was placed around him and remained in place for ten minutes while something involving a call-boy occurred, after which the screen was removed to reveal the same customer, coat and tie still intact ... that, too, I shall never forget.

There is much that is serious in this book: most notably Miller's clear evidence that "the homosexual"-as a concept, a type, and an identity - is far from self-evident to most non-Christian and non-Jewish peoples; but it is all written up in entertaining and readable prose. "Gay Studies," it seems, is emerging from a dark age of self-pity, self-flagellation, political correctness, and academic turgidity. This can only be applauded.


Making History: The Struggle for Gay and Lesbian Equal Rights, 1945-1990, An Oral History.
By Eric Marcus (Harper Collins, 544 pages, $25).