Community Pioneers
Creators of Washington, DC's Gay Community

DR. LILLI VINCENZ


Arrived in Washington, DC in 1962.
Photo (c) Patsy Lynch

“I wanted to become active in educating the public about gay people ... That was very important to me.”

”I think we’re really in the vanguard of human progress. I’ve always felt that gay people potentially can be that because we have to be creative. We have to design our own lives ... It has to do with the right to be one’s self, to define oneself, to love whom one wants to love.“

Lilli Vincenz’ work for gay civil rights, for creating a safe social space for lesbians, and for creating a Community for Creative Self-Development opened new horizons for Washington’s gay community.  Her films of gay civil rights events have given the local and national gay community an invaluable visual archive of its early years.

Vincenz came to Washington, DC as a WAC neuropsychiatric technician doing on-the-job training at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in 1962.  Outed by her roommate, Vincenz was given a general discharge, under honorable conditions,from the Army.  Referred by the New York Mattachine society to Washington’s Mattachine Society (MSW), she joined in the fall of 1963.

IVincenz soon became an officer of the Mattachine Society of Washington.  She participated in MSW’s innovative picketing demonstrations here and in Philadelphia.  A gifted writer, she wrote for MSW’s publications, editing its quarterly Homosexual Citizen and later writinga column for New York’s Gay.  In the late 60s she became a filmmaker, filming the 1968 Third Reminder Day picket in Philadelphia for her first film Second Largest Minority.  In 1970, Gay and Proud in New York City, covering the first Christopher Street Liberation Day parade celebrating the first anniversary of the Stonewall riots in New York City.

In 1971, Vincenz helped spearhead and promote the Kameny for Congress campaign for Washington’s first non-voting delegate for Congress.  She and her then partner were deluged with calls from women eager to meet other gay women.  In response to obvious need, Vincenz opened her home weekly for a Wednesday evening Gay Women’s Open House.  These safe social gatherings lasted through 1979, providing a unique gathering place for area lesbians.

A psychotherapist since 1975, she returned to her studies in 1982 and received her PhD in 1990.  Two years later, Vincenz and her  partner, Nancy Ruth Davis, founded the Community for Creative Self-Development (CCSD), a holistic learning community to empower gay women and men, and all gay-friendly people creatively, spiritually, and psychologically.   After twelve years of workshops, classes, conferences, and quality newsletters, CCSD, which became dormant in 2004, remains alive in the yearly  yearly reunion of former members and interested friends, where Lilli and Nancy offer a program of Tales and Times, with writer Nancy reading from her stories and fiddler Lilli joyfully playing her beloved violin..
 
 

Rainbow History home page
List of Pioneers