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William Dale JenningsOct. 21, 1917May 11, 2000
Text by Jim Schneider, C. Todd White, and Walter L. Williams William Dale Jennings was born in Amarillo Texas on October 21, 1917. Not long thereafter his parents moved to Denver, Colorado. After graduating from high school there, he moved to Southern California, where he wrote, produced, and directed stage plays in Los Angeles and Pasadena. He studied dance under Lester Horton and later worked with Martha Graham, two early pioneers of modern interpretive dance.
While in the service, Jennings was awarded a World War II Victory Medal, an American Campaign Medal, an Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal, and a Philippine Liberation Ribbon with one bronze star. In 1946, after being honorably discharged, Jennings returned to Los Angeles and studied theater and film at the University of Southern California for two years. In 1950, Jennings stepped into history as one of the first five cofounders of the Mattachine Society, with Harry Hay, Rudi Gernreich, Bob Hull, and Chuck Rowland. Unlike Hay, Jennings did not believe that homosexual people qualified as “a people.” “How could you construct a cultural minority out of a group of people with little in common except what they did in bed?” he often puzzled with his friend, ONE Magazine coeditor Don Slater.
Jennings, of course, was totally disheartened. If word of this got out, his dream of a career in screen writing would be totally shot. From jail, Jennings called Mattachine cohort Harry Hay. Hay bailed him out of jail early the next morning, and it was then, over breakfast at the Brown Derby, that they decided to fight the charge in court, under grounds of entrapment. To this end, they founded the Citizens’ Committee to Outlaw Entrapment. Long Beach attorney George Sibley took on the case. After a dramatic Los Angeles court trial that lasted for ten days, Jennings won a jury acquittal in a rebuke of police harassment, intimidation, and entrapment of homosexuals. The acquittal energized other persecuted homosexual people into action throughout the nation and brought respect to the Mattachine Society, which had funded Jennings's defense. “The Love That Dared Not Speak Its Name” was now on its way out of the closet, and the infamous statutes of "Crimes Against Nature" on the law books in every one of the United States were targeted for eradication. By the year 2000, most States had removed those statutes from their laws, partly due to of the influence of Dale Jennings.
The idea to publish a magazine was first discussed in Los Angeles on October 15, 1952, during a Mattachine Society meeting at the home of Bill Lambert. The first ONE Magazine was published in January, 1953, largely through Jennings’s initiative. The Articles of Incorporation for ONE, Inc. were filed with the Secretary of State in Sacramento on May 27, 1953, and the official by-laws were filed later that year, on October sixteenth In 1954, the mailing of ONE Magazine to subscribers was confiscated by the Los Angeles Postmaster on the basis of obscenity. This led to a Federal Court case which ended with a 1958 U.S. Supreme Court decision ruling that a magazine calling for equality for homosexuals is not obscene. The Post Office was prevented from any further interference in the mailing of ONE Magazine. This decision brought more freedom to all media and was the basis for all future growth of the gay and lesbian press. This famous court battle is the subject of the first chapter, “ONE Standard of Justice,” in Courting Justice: Gay Men and Lesbians v. the Supreme Court by Joyce Murdoch and Deb Price (Basic Books: 2001, pp. 2750). Over the years Jennings contributed articles and book reviews to ONE Magazine and later for Tangents , the publication of the Homosexual Information Center where he was a member of the Board and served terms as Secretary and Vice President.
Jennings died from respiratory failure at Specialty Hospital, La Mirada, California, on May 11, 2000. He has bequeathed to HIC some 125 unpublished novels, movie scripts, treatments, his personal library, and movie critiques. He is survived by one nephew, plus friends and admirers from around the world. All thankful people may help by donating funds in memory of Dale Jennings to HIC for the preservation of his work.
This page was posted on Nov. 12, 2003 and last updated on
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