Sullivan, Louis, 1951-

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Sullivan, Louis, 1951-

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Sullivan, Louis, 1951-

Sullivan, Lou

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Sullivan, Lou

Sullivan, Louis Graydon

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Sullivan, Louis Graydon

Sullivan, Sheila Jean, 1951-

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Sullivan, Sheila Jean, 1951-

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Male

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1951-06-16

1951-06-16

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1991-03-02

1991-03-02

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Biographical History

Louis Graydon Sullivan, a pioneering female to male transsexual gay man, was born Sheila Jean Sullivan in 1953. He wrote many articles and books on female to male transsexuality, and a book on Jack B. Garland (a.k.a. Babe Bean). In 1986 Sullivan founded FTM International, a peer-support group devoted entirely to female to male individuals.

From the description of Louis Graydon Sullivan papers, 1955-1991 (bulk 1961-1991). (San Francisco Public Library). WorldCat record id: 37498063

Organizational History

FTM International (FTM) is the largest and oldest continuously running organization serving the Female-to-Male community and their allies. It is a peer-support group whose mission is to improve the quality of life and promote visibility and equality for female-to-male transpeople and their families. FTM International also campaigns to end shame and fear surrounding trans issues and to end economic marginalization of transpeople. To this end, the organization offers information, networking opportunities and advocacy to, and on behalf of, the trans-community. FTM International also provides educational services on transgender issues to the general public.

Author and activist Louis G. Sullivan founded FTM in San Francisco in 1986 as a support group for female-to-male transvestites and transsexuals. He started publishing the FTM Newsletter on a quarterly basis in September 1987. Until his death in 1991, Sullivan worked tirelessly to provide services for FTMs and increase understanding of their lives. Before he died, Sullivan asked transgender activist and educator Jamison (James) Green to take over publication of the newsletter. That same year, 1991, FTM began holding regular monthly meetings. In 1994, the organization�s name was changed to FTM International to reflect its growth worldwide. In November 1996, FTM International was granted status as a non-profit 501c3 educational organization and elected its first board of directors in June 1997. In addition to Sullivan and Green, past FTM International presidents have included Drago Renteria, Dion Manley and Zion Free Johnson. The current president is Levi Atler.

In 2006 the FTM Newsletter serves over 1,000 subscribers and is the largest FTM publication in the world. FTM International offers support groups for FTMs and their families in cities in more than 18 nations. Members represent a variety of cultural and economic backgrounds, a wide range of ages and every imaginable sexual orientation. In addition to holding support meetings and publishing the newsletter, FTM International organizes events, publishes a resource guide, maintains a website (http://www.ftmi.org) and answers correspondence from FTMs around the world. The San Francisco Chapter, which is named after Louis Sullivan, has over 300 members and conducted nearly 150 support meetings in 2005.

From the guide to the FTM International records, 1986-2005, (Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Historical Society)

Biographical Sketch

Louis Graydon Sullivan, a female-to-male transsexual gay man, was born Sheila Jean Sullivan in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on June 16, 1951, the daughter of John Eugene Sullivan, who owned a small hauling and moving company, and Nancy Louise Sullivan, a homemaker and sales clerk in a stationary store. Sullivan was the third child of six: Kathleen Marie (1948), John Eugene, Jr. (1949), Bridgit Therese (1953), Maryellen (1955), and Patrick Rory (1957). Sullivan grew up in an emotionally close-knit Catholic family in suburban Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, in modest economic circumstances. Extremely religious as a child, Sullivan attended Catholic primary and secondary schools, where he compiled an above-average academic record. Following high school graduation in 1970, Sullivan began working as a secretary in the Slavic Languages Department of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.

Sullivan's intense, life-long, but rather unfocussed concern with male gender identity and male same-sex relationships began to take on greater definition in the early 1970s. Sullivan recalled that as a child he had always enjoyed "playing boys" and realized even then that it "meant more to me than it did to the other kids." By his early teens, Sullivan's diaries, poems and short stories reflected an interest in male homosexuality and questions about gender identity. At age seventeen, Sullivan began a long-term relationship with a self-described "feminine" male lover, and play with gender roles figured in the relationship from the beginning. Both Sullivan and his companion were attracted to the gay liberation movement, and to the gender-bending aesthetic then evident in much of popular culture.

By 1973, Sullivan identified as a "female transvestite" and began a career of transgender community activism with the publication of "A Transvestite Answers a Feminist," an article which appeared in the Gay People's Union [GPU] News. Another article, "Looking Towards Transvestite Liberation," published the next year in the same periodical and widely reprinted in the gay and lesbian press, remains a landmark article for its early investigation of the question of gender identity in homosexual culture. Sullivan continued to contribute articles and reviews to the GPU News through 1980, and donated valuable type setting and copy editing services as well.

Sullivan identified as a female-to-male transsexual by 1975, when he moved to San Francisco and found work as a secretary for the Wilson Sporting Goods Company. Although still employed as a female, Sullivan spent approximately 75% of his time cross-dressed and living as a gay man. In 1976 Sullivan began seeking sex-reassignment surgery, which was routinely denied him on the basis of his openly declared homosexual orientation. Female-to-gay male transsexuality was not recognized by the medical/psychotherapeutic establishment as a legitimate form of gender dysphoria at that time. As a result of his own frustrations, Sullivan became involved in an eventually successful campaign to remove homosexual orientation from the list of contraindications for sex-reassignment. He pioneered methods of obtaining peer-support, professional counselling, endocrinological services and reconstructive surgery outside the institution of the gender dysphoria clinics, and disseminated this information at the grass-roots level through his booklet Information for the Female to Male Cross-Dresser and Transsexual, which is now in its third edition and is still the only practical guide for FTMs. As a consequence of his efforts, Sullivan became one of the founders of the female-to-male transsexual community, and is responsible to a significant degree for the rapid growth of the FTM population during the late 1980s.

Sullivan began taking testosterone in 1979, at which time he also became a volunteer at the Janus Information Facility (now J2CP), a gender dysphoria clearinghouse and referral service in San Francisco. He also became involved in Golden Gate Girls/Guys, one of the first social/educational transgender organizations to offer support to FTM transsexuals. In 1980 he underwent a double mastectomy and began living full time as a gay man. Sullivan also changed jobs at this time, becoming an associate engineering technician at the Atlantic-Ritchfield Company, so that coworkers would have no knowledge of his previous female life history. That same year he published the first edition of his Information for the FTM. Throughout the decade, Sullivan continued to write about female-to-male issues in the gay and transgender press, and became a popular public speaker on the topic in the San Francisco Bay area. He became involved in the Gay and Lesbian Historical Society, whose newsletter he helped edit and publish. In 1984 Sullivan started his own typesetting and word-processing business. He also began work on a biography of Jack B. Garland, a female who lived as a man for forty years at the turn of the century. The book was published to favorable reviews by Alyson Press in 1990.

In 1986, Sullivan finally obtained genital reconstruction surgery; he also organized FTM, the first peer-support group devoted entirely to female-to-male individuals. Later that year Sullivan was diagnosed with AIDS. In his last years Sullivan devoted himself to work on behalf of FTMs, as well as the broader transgender and homosexual communities. He died of an AIDS-related illness on March 6, 1991, at the age of 39.

From the guide to the Louis Graydon Sullivan Papers, 1755-1991 (bulk 1961-1991), (Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender Historical Society)

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External Related CPF

https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n90627611

https://catalog.archives.gov/id/10571781

https://viaf.org/viaf/33616137

https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n90627611

https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n90627611

https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q6685787

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eng

Latn

Subjects

Female-to-male transsexuals

Female-to-male transsexuals

Transsexualism

Transsexuals

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California�San Francisco (county)�San Francisco

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California--San Francisco

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<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>

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w6sp132c

88045295