McConnell, Michael, 1942-

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Michael McConnell was born in 1942, grew up in Oklahoma, and received his Master’s degree in Library Science in the early 1960s. He met Jack Baker in Norman, Oklahoma in 1966. McConnell and Baker, committed to each other as life partners with the intention of becoming legally married, moved to Lawrence, Kansas in 1968. McConnell worked as an acquisitions and reference librarian at Park College, while Baker commuted to an engineering job in Topeka.

In 1969, both men moved to Minneapolis. McConnell accepted an offer of a position as head cataloger on the University of Minnesota’s St. Paul campus library. Baker applied to and enrolled in the University of Minnesota Law School.

Almost immediately upon arriving in Minneapolis, McConnell and Baker’s lives were immersed in activism in the nascent Twin Cities gay community. Baker joined F.R.E.E. (FREE/Fight Repression of Erotic Expression) a local group committed to advancing homosexual visibility and rights. With John Preston, McConnell co-founded Gay House, an early gay community center in Minneapolis. McConnell’s hiring documents were presented to the University Board of Regents for routine review and approval . On May 18, 1970, the couple filed for and were denied a marriage license in Hennepin County. The breaking story quickly made national news. The couple appeared on network television, and in popular news publication, including LOOK and LIFE magazines. McConnell’s job offer was subsequently revoked by the regents, who contended that McConnell’s notoriety was detrimental to the University. McConnell took his employment discrimination case to court, soliciting the backing of state and regional library associations on his behalf. In April, 1972, The US Supreme Court refused to hear arguments on his case.

Baker, meanwhile, had become involved in campus politics in addition to gay issues. After admission to law school in 1970, Baker ran for student body president in 1971 with the intention of creating a more participatory role for students in campus governance. His agenda included agitating for student representation on Board of Regents committees, increased student-run housing and charters for a student run radio station and bookstore. He also addressed discriminatory practices in on-campus job recruitment. His student status at the law school allowed Baker to utilize student legal services to pursue a gay marriage appeal in the courts. Baker ran for student body president again in 1972, and was re-elected by a wide margin. In October 1972, after making its way through Minnesota and Supreme court, the US Supreme Court again refused to consider a case involving McConnell and Baker, this time declining to deliberate on the validity of the McConnell/Baker marriage.

In August 1971, after being denied a Hennepin County license, McConnell and Baker were able to obtain a marriage license in Blue Earth County, Minnesota by testing weaknesses in Minnesota marriage residency laws. On September 3, 1971, Rev. Roger Lynn, a Methodist minister, officiated at McConnell and Baker’s marriage ceremony in Minneapolis. Hennepin county officials at once disputed the validity of the license. Minnesota law at the time required that a license be issued in the bride's county of residence. “Because there was no bride, officials argued, there could be no entitlement to a license. After the executed license was filed, the Hennepin County Attorney convened a grand jury, which declined to indict either the couple who procured the marriage license or the minister who authenticated it.”

By the beginning of the 1980s, both McConnell and Baker were settled into their respective careers in librarianship and law. McConnell was hired by Hennepin County Libraries in 1971, where he held progressively more senior administrative positions. McConnell retired from Hennepin County Libraries with commendation in 2010. Baker ran several times as a candidate for Associate Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court. Both men continued to contest laws that limited their identity as a married couple.

A coda to the couple’s ongoing actions asserting the legitimacy of their marriage involved the filing of joint tax returns. “In 2003, Baker and McConnell filed a joint tax return for the second time. They amended their individual returns for the year 2000, filing jointly as a single couple, pursuant to the marriage license previously issued by a Minnesota District Court. The IRS challenged the validity of the marriage license and argued that, even if the license were valid, the Defense of Marriage Act (voted into law by Congress in 1996), did not allow it to be recognized. An appeal was dismissed by the U.S. District Court of Minnesota and affirmed by the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals.”

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf Michael McConnell Files University of Minnesota Libraries. Jean-Nickolaus Tretter Collection in Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Studies
referencedIn Appellate Case Files, March 3, 1891–1998 National Archives at Kansas City
referencedIn Robert W. Halfhill Papers University of Minnesota Libraries. Jean-Nickolaus Tretter Collection in Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Studies
referencedIn Records of the Supreme Court of the United States, 1772 - 2007. Appellate Jurisdiction Case Files, 1792 - 2015 National Archives Library, National Archives Records Administration
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
spouseOf Baker, Jack, 1942- person
associatedWith University of Minnesota. corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
Norman OK US
United States 00 US
Minneapolis MN US
Subject
Gay activists
LGBT
Occupation
Librarians
Activity

Person

Birth 1942-05-19

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