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To: FlingWingFlyer

Back in my day there were no such thing as “transgender” at least not openly, if so they would have been called queers.


13 posted on 10/23/2015 9:39:08 PM PDT by doc1019 (Out of my mind ... back in 5)
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To: doc1019

That’s exactly what they are.


21 posted on 10/23/2015 9:45:39 PM PDT by ROCKLOBSTER (Celebrate "Republicans Freed the Slaves Month")
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To: doc1019

“Back in my day there were no such thing as “transgender” at least not openly, if so they would have been called queers.”

[LOL] Evidently you led a very sheltered life. For the sake of historical accuracy, see some of these sources describing some of the historical figures stretching back into ancient times. Note how they include soldiers, diplomats, royalty, major political figures in their public duties, artists, writers, and more. Note, these sources barely scratch the surface of the famous and infamous, and they do not even touch upon the multitude of lesser known people through history. Be sure to watch the WWII movie at the end of the list.

History of cross-dressing
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_cross-dressing

History of transgender people in the United States
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_transgender_people_in_the_United_States

Portrait mistaken for 18th-century lady is early painting of transvestite
http://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2012/jun/06/portrait-18th-century-early-transvestite

Edward Hyde, 3rd Earl of Clarendon
Edward Hyde, 3rd Earl of Clarendon (28 November 1661 – 31 March 1723), styled Viscount Cornbury between 1674 and 1709, was Governor of New York and New Jersey between 1701 and 1708, and is reputed to have had a predeliction for cross-dressing while in Crown office.
[....]
Reputation

The purported portrait of Lord Cornbury from the New York Historical Society

Viscount Cornbury came to be fabled in historical literature as a moral profligate, sunk in corruption: possibly the worst governor Britain ever appointed to an American colony.[1] The early accounts claim he took bribes and plundered the public treasury. Nineteenth century historian George Bancroft said that Cornbury illustrated the worst form of the English aristocracy’s “arrogance, joined to intellectual imbecility”. Later historians characterise him as a “degenerate and pervert who is said to have spent half of his time dressed in women’s clothes”, a “fop and a wastrel”. He is said to have delivered a “flowery panegyric on his wife’s ears” after which he invited every gentleman present to feel precisely how shell-like they were; to have misappropriated £1,500 meant for the defence of New York Harbor, and, scandalously, to have dressed in women’s clothing and lurked “behind trees to pounce, shrieking with laughter, on his victims”.[2]

Cornbury is reported to have opened the 1702 New York Assembly clad in a hooped gown and an elaborate headdress and carrying a fan, imitative of the style of Queen Anne. When his choice of clothing was questioned, he replied, “You are all very stupid people not to see the propriety of it all. In this place and occasion, I represent a woman (The Queen), and in all respects I ought to represent her as faithfully as I can.” It is also said that in August 1707, when his wife Lady Cornbury died, His High Mightiness (as he preferred to be called) attended the funeral dressed as a woman. It was shortly after this that mounting complaints from colonists prompted The Queen to remove Cornbury from office.[3]

In 2000 Patricia U. Bonomi re-examined these assertions and found them to be questionable and based on very little evidence. Three colonials, all members of a faction opposed to Cornbury, wrote four letters between 1707 and 1709 discussing a rumour that Lord Cornbury wore women’s clothes. There are also some early documents that might be cited to support charges of having taken bribes or misappropriated government funds, but there the contemporary evidence ends.[4]

A portrait possibly of Lord Cornbury dressed in women’s clothes which hangs at the New York Historical Society. Philip Davenport-Hines, a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, thinks the portrait accurately depicts Cornbury and pronounced Bonomi’s findings inconclusive.[5]

24 Transgendered Historical Figures
https://lockerdome.com/7469898657957953/7912829374188052

This Is the Army - 1943, starring Lt. Ronald Reagan, Alan Hale (Gilligan’s Island), and others
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mRsniPryS0s


66 posted on 10/24/2015 10:03:14 AM PDT by WhiskeyX
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