This Day In Gay Utah History SEPTEMBER 6th
Ogden Court House |
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Dr. Max's Shock Machine diagrams |
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Original Cast of Boys In the Band 1968 |
1973 The Herald Provo Utah Power Struggle May Be Factor
Troubles at State Prison Aired Point of the Mountain UPI Officials disagree on what exactly what caused the outbreak of violence at the Utah State Prison in recent past weeks during which inmates have stabbed one beaten, one critically, burned and another strangled to death. Some say drugs, some say homosexuality, and some believe at least part of the problem is the result of a power struggle among prisoners to determine who will be the next "con boss' the man with the extra privileges who tell other convicts what to do and stand to reap some financial reward. What investigators do agree on is that as long as the convict code of silence prevails most of the incidents will remain unexplained. Salt Lake County Sheriff Capt. N.D. Hayward says the power struggle among inmates vying for the vacant position of con boss is probably involved in the month of violence. "I don't think that there's any doubt that there 's a power struggle going on down there. I don't know the exact extent but I am sure there is one." Hayward whose office is charged with investigating any felony committed at the prison says his investigations into the eight attacks since late July have not succeeded in definitely linking them to the power struggle for top con. But he says the July 30 strangulation of 27 year old inmate Michael Lamphear, could be connected to the struggle for control of the convict population. Former Warden John W. Turner, who retired week ago attributed the violence to a new "drop of drugs." "that the power struggle may be a part of it. But if so, I still think there would be a little drugs involved." And prison officials themselves have said they can trace at least two of the incidents to homosexual conflicts. Capt. hayward says there is a vacuum at the prison - a vacuum crested by the parole of one con boss last December, and his successor in early August about the time the violence began. He says that there has been a battle among inmates to fill that position and one convict who he declined to identify has emerging as victor. Ken Shulson, administrative assistant to Warden Samuel smith says there is a power struggle among the inmates but he claims that has nothing to do with the current violence. He prefers to see the eight incidences as relatively isolated occurrences caused by drugs and homosexuality. "there are one or two explosions and a lot of the other situations that are brewing tend to come to the surface all at once." "I don't see any active campaign for con boss taking place," Shulman says. He says e has seen "no power struggle and no gang situations." On the other hand however Shulman says of the attacks "Obviously they could have been related to a power struggle but there isn't a significant amount of evidence to point that out. "When the top man cates there's a struggle within the ranks of his followers to get to the top." "It's obviously taking place but it hasn't surfaced." Shulman says a con boss, " realizes some financial rewards, has a lot of people working for him, and his political position gives him special privileges. The financial rewards usually come form control of illegal traffic in drugs and commissary, he says and the con boss is an officer to an inmate council. "these positions give the inmate certain privileges such as access to the commissary and food preparation areas. Although he describes the eight attacks as separate and due to different causes he adds "some of them obviously had some connection with each other. Shulman blames the wave of violence primarily on homosexuality. He says the prison administration has began isolating known homosexuals setting up psychiatric counseling programs for them, and threatening to prosecute those practicing homosexual acts. Both Shulson and Warden Smith claim drugs will continue to be a problem as long as there is a prison. "Short of complete isolation there's no way to eliminate it ( drug traffic), says Shulson. "We close the door and another opens up, Smith said recently. Whatever the cause, only two of the attacks are moving towards prosecution. The five stabbing cases says Capt. Hayward have been "closed by exclusion- that is the victims refuse flatly to testify. Earl Andersen 27 has been charged with attempted homicide for allegedly dosing fellow inmate Pierre Nelson with lighter fluid and setting him on fire. Nelson remained in serious condition at University Medical Center. And Hayward said investigation into the strangulation of Michael Lamphear July 30 has narrowed to several suspects. Lamphear was strangled in his cell and an autopsy showed his blood alcohol to be 362. Hayward says 400 is lethal. The investigations continue. The causes remain vague. The only thing on which officials appear unanimous is that the exact causes will probably never surface. "We are having trouble with them talking to us, " Hayward says of the witnesses and victims of the eight cases. Shulsen says the "convict code" of silence will obscure many of the facts.: "The people who really know what's going on are the inmates," he says. "The people who know what's really happening just refuse to cooperate."
Orson Spencer Hall |
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Bare Bum Beach |
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Scott Stites |
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Robb Bullock |
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Marlin Criddle |
2005 Tuesday Subject: [slmetro_staff] Changes at Metro Greetings one and all, With
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Jere Keys |
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Michael Aaron |
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Joe Redburn age 18 |
Laramie Wyoming to Elmer W. Redburn and Gerda Christensen Redburn. He was raised and educated in Laramie. [Note In High School as a Freshman he was class Treasurer. He was on the annual staff for the Junior Prom, and was a member of National Thesbians .] He went to the University of Wyoming, and then Armed Forces Information School in Ft. Slocum, New York. "In those days you either gave yourself up to the draft -- which I did -- or wait 'til they drafted you," he said. "I just wanted to get it over with. In those days, if you checked the box that you were gay they rejected you, so I didn't. I went in actually lying to them. I was in the U.S. Army at Fort Riley in Kansas for two years. What we did was the news on local stations. Then when I got out, I went back to Laramie, and then I came over to Salt Lake to get a job here." With his ultra-deep bass voice, he began a long career in radio on KTKK -- one of the first all-talk stations in the country during the Vietnam era. Joe played a major role in the building of a true Gay community in the Salt Lake area. He has also been credited with establishing the first Gay Pride in Salt Lake. Joe was the owner of several Salt lake City LGBT clubs over the years, starting with the Sun Tavern in the 70s, He was honored with the RCGSE Community Service Award, and in 2004, was given the Utah Gay Rodeo Association Grand Marshal Award. Joe is survived by a niece, several nephews, and cousins. He was preceded in death by his Father, Elmer W. Redburn, Mother, Gerda (Christensen) Redburn, his Brother Richard Redburn, and his Sister Nancy (Redburn) Valencia. Memorial services are pending and will be announced by the Franklin County Funeral Home, 56 S. State Street, Preston, Idaho.
Joe Redburn, ‘father’ of Utah’s LGBT
Community, has died Joe Q Salt Lake by Michael Aaron Joe Redburn
Redburn, the owner of several Salt lake City LGBT clubs
over the years starting with the Sun Tavern in the 70s, died of natural causes
Sunday, Sept. 6. He died at the Intermountain Medical Center after being found
unresponsive at the South Salt Lake Men’s Resource Center homeless shelter. He
was 81 years old. Redburn bought the Railroad Exchange
Saloon on the corner of 400 West and South Temple and opened the Sun Tavern as
a gay bar on Feb. 20, 1973. We opened at noon on that day in 1973.
I’d never done it before. We were all scared,” Redburn said in an interview
with QSaltLake Magazine‘s JoSelle Vanderhooft in 2008. “The Sun Tavern had been
the Railroad Exchange, and I found it because that’s where the anti-war people
hung out. It was owned by a former Pittsburgh Steeler, and they had a sign
outside – it was a Pepsi sign that said Railroad Exchange. And I changed it to
say The Sun Tavern. I can remember a guy who had a bar just south who said,
‘You can’t do that! The gay bars can’t have signs!’ And I said, ‘Well, I’m
gonna do it, anyway.’ That’s what got me, how oppressed this community was. We
were oppressing ourselves. We didn’t think we could put a sign in front of a
gay bar.” “I named it after the Midnight Sun in
San Francisco,” he said. “When we got the old Sun, I think we put
the first sound system in for a DJ in Salt Lake,” Redburn said. “I’ve never
just catered to the gay community, everyone was welcome. So we had a lot of
straight people that liked it, especially when we put in the sound system.” In the next few years, he leased an
adjoining space and called it the East Room, which was arguably the first LGBT
community center in the state. In 1974, Redburn hosted what many call
Utah’s first Gay Pride — a kegger on the shores of the Great Salt Lake known as
Bare Ass Beach. The next year it was held up City Creek Canyon. “We started having keggers up the
canyon, and that kinda started everybody thinking – since Gay Pride was getting
started around the country – that we should do more,” Redburn said in the
interview. “And then other people kind of got involved so we started having
another at Fairmont Park with a couple of hundred people. And that probably
launched Pride out of the old Sun. Then it evolved into what it is today.” When the then-Delta Center was built at
that location, the original Sun Tavern was relocated to 727 W. 200 South. He
later started Bricks Club at the old In-Between bar when one of the owners
died, and then The Trapp (now The Sun Trapp), which he owned for 20 years. Redburn was born and raised in Laramie
Wyoming. He went to the University of Wyoming there andUniversity of Wyoming
then Armed Forces
Information School in Ft. Slocum, New York. “In those days you either gave yourself
up to the draft — which I did — or wait ‘til they drafted you,” he said. “I
just wanted to get it over with. In those days, if you checked the box that you
were gay they rejected you, so I didn’t. I went in actually lying to them. I
was in the U.S. Army at Fort Riley in Kansas for two years. What we did was the
news on local stations. Then when I got out, I went back to Laramie, and then I
came over to Salt Lake to get a job here.” With his ultra-deep bass voice, he began
a long career in radio on KTKK — one of the first all-talk stations in the
country during the Vietnam era. “We started out with a program called
Controversy. This was one of the first times in Salt Lake talk radio where the
talk show host actually gave his own opinions,” Redburn said. “So we were
different and we were probably that successful because I could give my
opinions. I was a Goldwater conservative at the time.” Ultimately, Redburn gave up his
conservative beliefs and, at the same time as Hillary Clinton, he began to
support Democrat Eugene McCarthy and protested the Vietnam War. In time,
Redburn would consider himself a Libertarian, while supporting Democratic
candidates. He was on the board of directors of the
American Civil Liberties Union and ran for the Utah Legislature in 1976 in the
Avenues. “I lost two-to-one to Genevieve Atwood.
And then the Republican right wing got rid of her because she was too liberal,”
Redburn said. “But now the Avenues are like Democrats. Salt Lake has become so
Democrat, it’s amazing. I only ran for the legislature once, but it was quite
an experience. Everybody ought to do it once.” Redburn was honored with the Royal Court
of the Golden Spike Empire Community Service Award in 1983. In 2004 he was
given the Utah Gay Rodeo Association Grand Marshal Award. Joe Redburn, received the Utah Pride Center's Lifetime Achievement Award
in 2008. Over the many years he owned his bars,
on Prides he always held a free steak fry, and hired the Saliva Sisters to
perform. In recent years, Redburn spent much of
his time posting barbs on Facebook. In the past two years, however, he seemed
to drop off the face of the planet. It was then, it turns out, that Redburn
found himself homeless. Former Sun Trapp bar owner Frank Chugg,
who worked with Redburn for many years, saw him at the bar in August. He could
tell he was homeless and Chugg appealed to the Royal Court of the Golden Spike
Empire, whom Redburn hosted for dozens of years beginning with their first
reign, for help. Friend Marty Pendry-Struthers did a
GoFundMe fundraiser which raised about $2,000. “I can’t even begin to tell you the
hundreds of memories we have with our friend, Joe,” said Pendry-Struthers.
“What do you say about a sarcastically funny man who also cared so deeply about
our community and the lives it surrounded? How do you put into words that his
‘bigger than life’ presence could either scare you or educate you or both? I
truly think that, not only have we just lost a powerful and unforgettable human
being, but we also lost part of our community’s heart. An icon, a leader, a
presence, and a deep, intelligent voice. But most of all, we lost a beautiful
friend.” “I first met Joe in 1981 when I repaired
his sound system in the original Sun,” said Club Try-Angles co-owner Gene
Gieber. “We had a sarcastic and fun relationship throughout the years. On
Sunday afternoons, we would get into beer buying wars on the patio at
Backstreet. After opening Try-angles, we would trade (friendly) jabs at each
other in our weekly ads. At Off Trax, we named our grilled ham and cheese the
Rita Redburn. He ordered one every time he came in. To say that Joe was an icon
of the gay community is not enough. He WAS the gay community.” “Joe Redburn was my friend, boss,
roommate, and business partner,” said Nikki Boyer, who worked with Redburn for
many years since the 70s. “He was the father of the LGBT community. He gave us
a wonderful, safe place to meet, exchange ideas, and dance our asses off. We
owe him a lot. Rest, my friend.” “Joe was a man who would willing help
anyone who needed it,” said Bob Childers. “He gave jobs to many in the
community when they were down and needed help. Though he could be gruff on the
outside he was a man with a true heart and spirit for the LGBTQ community. Born
in Wyoming Joe always head that true western spirit and loved to play country
music at Trapp in the DJ booth named for him. Rita’s Roost. He was one of
Cher’s biggest fans and would often proclaim loudly, ‘Cher is God!’ Steak
Fries, Fish Fries, and his annual Labor Day luau were famous, where he have
someone barbecue a whole pig overnight at the bar. Pounds of cabbage on St.
Patrick’s Day and, of course, the place to be for those without family on
Thanksgiving. Joe donated to the community both financially and with a place
for groups to hold gatherings. We have lost a true icon of the community of not
only Salt Lake City, but all of Utah. He will be missed.” “Joe, I am so grateful for your life,”
Jim Dabakis wrote on his Facebook wall. “The doors you opened. You made life so
much more open and acceptable for so many of us in the community and the state.
I am upset at the way life ended for you. If I could have found you, I would
have helped. Special thanks to those that tried to help Joe. Salt Lake City
flags should be at half-mast. This man was a great, albeit very human, Utah
pioneer.” “I can only think of a few people who
did as much for the Pride community of Utah as Joe Redburn,” Salt Lake City
Weekly Publisher John Saltas wrote in his column. “He did the heavy lifting for
decades, including hosting his outspoken radio program, opening the Sun Tavern
(now known in its latest iteration as Sun Trapp), promoting and helping to fund
the original gay community tabloids, and even hosting the seminal event that
grew into Utah’s renowned Pride Parade. That he died alone and homeless is a
real kick in the pants and a warning to all would-be pioneers: Very few will
understand or care what you’re going through today, including some whose lives
you’ve made better.” “Joe was a hero in this town. If you
don’t know that, especially if you don’t know that and consider yourself part
of the LGBTQ+ community, then shame on you,” Saltas continued. “He opened the
door for you and held it open. He had the foresight to shape the minds of
people like me, to push citizens to do the right thing, to hug, to share, to
engage, to grow, to awaken, to be proud of one another.” Funeral services were handled by
Franklin County Funeral Home. This story will be updated as funeral
arrangements are made.
Ben Williams: there seems to be a discrepency in reports ofthe death of Joe Redburn. A Salt Lake Tribune article mistakely stated that he died Spetember when actually that was probably the date he was cremated. He died September 6 in a hospital in Murray after living in a homeless shelter.
Joe Redburn, founder of two famous Salt Lake City gay bars, dies in homeless shelter at 82 Salt Lake Tribune By Sean P. Means Joe Redburn, the founder of two iconic Salt Lake City gay bars who brought the beer for what became the first Utah Pride celebration, has died. Redburn died Tuesday, Sept. 22, at the Men’s Resource Center in South Salt Lake City, according to the LGBTQ magazine Q Salt Lake, which first reported his death. He was 82. The magazine said officials had not released a cause of death. “He wasn’t just a bar owner. He built our community and kept us safe,” said Roy Li Zhang, chairperson of the Utah Queer Historical Society. “Joe really brought our community together with these bars. They really were our social clubs.” “Joe had great ideas. He was very progressive,” Nikki Boyer, a longtime activist and friend of Redburn, said. In 1973, Redburn opened The Sun at the corner 400 West and South Temple, facing the Union Pacific station. (The spot is now the northwest steps of Vivint Smart Home Arena.) Redburn was inspired by the Midnight Sun, a gay bar in San Francisco, Boyer said. The Sun, she said, “was like the first disco in Utah. It had the first disco ball, the first live DJs. … It was about all the freedom we had there. It was a good time. It was a great time.” Former Utah state Sen. Jim Dabakis had just left Brigham Young University, and was just coming out of the closet, when he first visited The Sun in the mid-'70s. “I remember being overwhelmed that this was possible,” Dabakis said. At the time, he thought, “Are there this many gay people in the whole world?” Dabakis also knew Redburn from listening to him as a host on talk-radio station KTKK, aka K-TALK. Redburn was a fixture there from the late-'60s until the station let him go in 1993. Station brass said they let him go because of a format change; Redburn said it was because he was openly gay and a liberal on an increasingly conservative medium. (In his final years on the station, Redburn was paired with arch-conservative Mills Crenshaw.) Dabakis said he gravitated toward K-TALK, and ended up working as an unpaid intern there. Listening to Redburn, he said, “is really where I learned politics.” Dabakis also rang doorbells in the Avenues for Redburn, when he made an unsuccessful run for the Utah Legislature in 1976. In 1975, Redburn, Boyer and others organized a party in City Creek Canyon for about 300 gay men and lesbians. Redburn brought some kegs from the bar. “Queers like to drink beer, let’s face it,” Boyer said. “We were loose. It was the ’70s, for God’s sake.” That kegger started a tradition that grew into the first Utah Pride celebration. At the time, though, Boyer said, “we didn’t dare call it ‘Pride,’ or nobody would have come.” The Sun moved in 1983 to its second location, at 200 South and 700 West. Redburn sold The Sun in 1990. In 1991, he opened a small, homey gay country-western bar, The Trapp, at 600 West and 100 South. “It was the place to be,” said Johnny Harris, known locally as Johnny Disco, a longtime bartender at The Trapp. “If you weren’t there by 6:30 or 7 o’clock, there wasn’t a bar stool to be had.” In The Trapp, Harris said, “there was this amazing energy. It was classy, and clean. It was a beautiful place to be.” A focal point of The Trapp, recalled Debbie Hall, director of adult programs at the Utah Pride Center, was the tiny dance floor. Above the floor, instead of a mirrored disco ball, was a mirrored pair of cowboy boots. Redburn sold The Trapp in the late ’90s. When The Sun blew over in a tornado in 1999, the new owners of The Trapp paid homage by renaming their bar The Sun Trapp. In the last few years, friends knew Redburn had financial and health problems, and was experiencing homelessness at the time of his death. “He just kind of dropped off the face of the earth,” Boyer said. Redburn’s death, Hall said, points to a troubling issue in the LGBTQ community: the loneliness experienced by elderly queer people. LGBTQ people are twice as likely to be aging alone as non-LGBTQ people, Hall said — and four times as likely to never have gotten married or had children. “We are dealing with the generation where it was not OK to be gay,” said Hall, who oversees the Utah chapter of SAGE, a group for elderly queer people. They are a generation, she said, that has dealt with discrimination and ostracism, having their homosexuality treated as a mental disorder, and the deaths of friends during the AIDS epidemic of the 1980s. Harris said a memorial service is being planned for Redburn in November at The Sun Trapp.
A Find A Grave posting for Joseph “Joe” Redburn by Krista Al Qirim stated "birth unknown death 22 Sep 2020 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA burial Cremated Joe was a pioneer in Salt Lake City’s gay community. He was one of the founders of the original Pride celebration, which had its roots in the annual Kegger up City Creek Canyon, the beer for which was provided by Joe. He was the founder of the famous Sun Tavern, and later the Trapp. Joe died at the age of 82 while a resident of a homeless shelter. Don’t let this humble exit fool you—he was a giant of a man who made the world a better place for so many. Those who loved and admired him are planning a memorial and celebration of his life in November of 2020."
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