FREDERIC ANDRE SARGEANT, born on this date, is a French-American gay rights activist and a former lieutenant with the Stamford, Connecticut Police Department. He participated in each of the nights of the 1969 Stonewall riots and was one of the four co-founders of the first NYC Pride March march in Manhattan in 1970. He was vice-chairman of the Homophile Youth Movement at the time. As a boy he had posed for the illustrations of “Dick” in grammar-school readers featuring Dick and Jane.
Sargeant was born in Fontainebleau, France, to an American G.I. father and a French mother. He grew up in Connecticut.
Sargeant moved to New York City at age nineteen. There, he met and began dating Craig Rodwell, who had recently opened what was then the country’s only gay bookstore, the Oscar Wilde Memorial Bookshop in Greenwich Village. The bookshop was a gathering place for young gay activists, and soon Sargeant was managing the store and had become an active member of the Homophile Youth Movement (HYMN), which operated out of it.
After 1 a.m. on Saturday, June 28, 1969, Sargeant and Rodwell were returning from dinner at a friend’s home and were passing the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar and club owned by a member of the Genovese crime family. They saw a crowd of about 75 people gathered outside the Inn and a police car in front, and were told the club had been raided. As police emerged from inside the Stonewall leading a customer, someone began throwing coins at the officers and others joined in throwing objects and yelling insults, eventually forcing the police to retreat back into the building and call for reinforcements. A full-scale riot broke out between the responding Tactical Patrol Force and the crowd that lasted for several hours, with Sargeant and Rodwell staying until the sun came up.
As a member of Mattachine, Craig Rodwell had participated in July 4 ‘Annual Reminders’ for gay rights at Independence Hall in Philadelphia. In an effort to make gay integration into society and the workforce seem non-threatening, Mattachine’s Frank Kameny insisted on conservative dress and behavior at the protests: women were required to wear skirts and men suits, and no displays of affection were allowed between participants. At the Annual Reminder that was held just a week after the Stonewall riots began, Rodwell and other young activists balked at these restrictions, having come to the conclusion that more aggressive action was needed to achieve civil rights for gay people.
Five months after the Stonewall riots, in November 1969, the Eastern Regional Conference of Homophile Organizations (ERCHO) convened in Philadelphia. At the conference, Ellen Broidy and Linda Rhodes of the lesbian activist group Lavender Menace joined Rodwell and Sargeant in proposing the following resolution: “That the annual Reminder, in order to be more relevant, reach a greater number of people and encompass the ideas and ideals of the larger struggle in which we are involved–that of our fundamental human rights–be moved both in time and location. We propose that a demonstration be held annually on the last Saturday in June in New York City to commemorate the 1969 spontaneous demonstrations on Christopher Street and this demonstration be called CHRISTOPHER STREET LIBERATION DAY. No dress or age regulations shall be made for this demonstration.”
Sargeant supports the LGB Alliance, a group that describes its objective as “asserting the right of lesbians, bisexuals and gay men to define themselves as same-sex attracted”, and states that such a right is threatened by “attempts to introduce confusion between biological sex and the notion of gender.”
In 1971, Sargeant left New York and returned to Connecticut, where several years later, he decided to become a police officer: “I wanted to see if I could make a difference, and having seen the situation at Stonewall and how the NYPD handled that, I thought I could do it differently. Stonewall wasn’t the only riot I saw. I’d been caught up in riots in the Village before and watched what the police did.” He went on to attain the rank of lieutenant with the Stamford Police Department before retiring.
In 2014, at the 44th annual NYC Pride March, Sargeant was honored as one of the founders of Gay Pride. Once again he led the march with a bullhorn. In June 2019, Sargeant received an honorary award at the Association des Journalists LGBTQI Cote D’or in Paris, France.
He lives in Vermont with his husband, whom he married in 2010.