Biography
Ralph Waverly Judd was born in Zillah, Washington, on April 22, 1930. He entered Harvard as a Harvard National Scholar in 1947. The following year he enlisted in the Massachusetts National Guard and was elected Chairman of the Harvard Smoker Committee. He enlisted in the US Coast Guard in 1949, being appointed cadet in 1950. While at the Coast Guard Academy he served as editor-in-chief of the cadet magazine, Surf 'n' Storm . Upon graduation in 1954 he was commissioned ensign. In 1955, while serving on the Northwind, he helped build the DEWline (Distant Early Warning). He served as Airborne Ice observer during the International Geophysical Year, and delivered motor fuel to Sir Edmund Hillary of the Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition to the South Pole. After duty in 1958 as executive officer of the Ivy, the world's largest buoy tender, he returned to the Coast Guard Academy as cross country coach, and advisor to the cadet magazine; he became Chief of the Physics Section in 1962. In 1964, he obtained an MBA from George Washington University and was assigned commanding officer of the Comanche . In 1966, he was Executive Officer for Precommissioning Detail, Tight Reign, in Bangkok, Thailand, then Construction Expediter and first Commanding Officer of the only US Coast Guard station in Vietnam. In 1968, he was appointed first Chief of Coast Guard Exchanges, Commissaries, Clubs and Messes. In 1971, he served as commanding officer of the Rockaway out of New York. He retired with the rank of Commander in 1972, and entered on a career as writer. He published his first book, The Coast Guard in Film, in the 1970s. He began collecting materials for what became the world's largest collection on cross-dressing in the performing arts in the late 1970s, and in 1988 earned a PhD in Communications from Clayton University with his thesis, Origins of Crossdressing: A History of performance en travesty . He continued to publish widely, including the pictorial books Drag Gags; Fun with Female Impersonation from the Movies (1991), and Drag Gags Return; Tongue-in-Cheek Fun with Female Impersonation from the Movies (1992), and articles in such mainstream periodicals as Readers Digest, US Coast Guard Academy Alumni Association Bulletin, National Lampoon, Christopher Street, and Veterans Voices, and in a large number of specialty publications addressing the cross-dressing community. He died in Seattle, Washington, on December 20, 2007.
From the guide to the Ralph W. Judd collection on Cross-Dressing in the Performing Arts, 1848-circa 2000, (ONE National Gay and Lesbian Archives.)