JOSE JULIO SARRIA also known as The Grand Mere, Absolute Empress I de San Francisco, and the Widow Norton,
was an American political activist born on this date (d: 2013); Sarria
was born in San Francisco, California, and in 1961 became the first
openly gay candidate for public office in the United States. He is also
remembered for performing as a drag queen at the Black Cat Bar and as
the founder of the Imperial Court System.
José Sarria was
born in San Francisco, California, to Maria Dolores Maldonado and Julio
Sarria. His family was of Spanish and Colombian origin. His mother Maria was born in Bogotá to an upper class and politically active family. During
the events of the Thousand Days War and following her mother's death,
Maria sought out the protection of her mother's friend, General Rafael
Uribe Uribe, to escape Colombia. The
general located Maria's surviving uncle, who took her to the American
consulate. There she was made a ward of the United States and relocated
to Panama. "My mother
got to Panama with directions to the home of a family called Kopp. He
was the chairman of the big German beer company there", said Sarria. "She went to work for the Kopps. ... My mother was the upstairs maid and took care of the children." In 1919, she relocated to Guatemala City but remained there for just six months and, in 1920, sailed to San Francisco. As
Sarria reported it, "Now on the boat is where my mother met my father,
Julio Sarria. He came from a large and very wealthy family, very well
known. ... His grandparents came from Spain."
Following his military service, Sarria returned to San Francisco. He enrolled in college with plans of becoming a teacher. He and his sister Teresa began frequenting the Black Cat Bar, a center of the city's beat and bohemian scene.
Sarria and Teresa both became smitten with a waiter named Jimmy Moore
and bet as to which of them could get him into bed first. José won the
bet and soon Moore and he were lovers. Sarria began covering for Moore when he was unable to work and soon Black Cat owner Sol Stoumen hired him as a cocktail waiter.
At around this time, Sarria was arrested for solicitation in
a sting operation at the St. Francis Hotel. Sarria maintained his
innocence, stating that the arresting officer knew him personally. "But
they had to make an example of somebody ... I was in the wrong place at
the wrong time." Nonetheless,
he was convicted and subjected to a large fine. Sarria, understanding
that his conviction meant he could never become certified as a teacher,
dropped out of college. Unsure
of how to find work, he took the advice of a drag performer named
Michelle and entered a drag contest at an Oakland bar called Pearl's.
Sarria took second place, winning a two-week performance contract at the
bar at $50 a week. "I decided then to be the most notorious
impersonator or homosexual or fairy or whatever you wanted to call
me–and you would pay me for it." Returning to San Francisco, he picked up some small singing jobs while still cocktail waiting at the Black Cat.
Sarria ran for
the San Francisco Board of Supervisors in 1961, becoming the first
openly gay candidate for public office in the United States. Although
Sarria never expected to win he
almost did win by default. On the last day for candidates to file
petitions, city officials realized that there were fewer than five
candidates running for the five open seats, which would have guaranteed
Sarria a seat. By the end of the day, a total of 34 candidates had
filed. LCE co-founder Strait began printing the LCE News in part to support Sarria's candidacy. Sarria garnered some 6,000 votes in the citywide race, finishing ninth. This
was not enough to win a seat but was enough to shock political pundits
and set in motion the idea that a gay voting bloc could wield real power
in city politics. "[He]
put the gay vote on the map", said Terence Kissack, former executive
director of the GLBT Historical Society. "He made it visible and showed
there was a constituency." As
Sarria put it, "From that day on, nobody ran for anything in San
Francisco without knocking on the door of the gay community."
With the demise
of the Black Cat, Sarria helped found the Society for Individual
Rights (SIR) in 1963. SIR grew out of a split between Sarria and Strait
over the direction that LCE was heading. Strait and his supporters
wanted to focus more on publishing the group's newsletter, while Sarria
and his backers wanted to maintain focus on street-level organizing. SIR
sponsored both social and political functions, including bowling
leagues, bridge clubs, voter registration drives and "Candidates'
Nights" and published its own magazine, Vector. In
association with the Tavern Guild, SIR printed and distributed "Pocket
Lawyers". These pocket-sized guides offered advice on what to do if
arrested or harassed by police. SIR lasted for 17 years.
Crowned Queen of
the Beaux Arts Ball in 1964 by the Tavern Guild, Sarria, stating that he
was "already a queen", proclaimed himself "Her Royal Majesty, Empress
of San Francisco, José I, The Widow Norton". Sarria devised the name
"Widow Norton" as a reference to the much-celebrated citizen of 19th
century San Francisco, Joshua Norton, who had declared himself Emperor
of the United States and Protector of Mexico in 1859. Sarria organized elaborate annual pilgrimages to lay flowers on Norton's grave in the Woodlawn Cemetery in Colma, California. He purchased a plot adjacent to Norton's where he is now interred.
Sarria's
assumption of the title of Empress led to the establishment of
the Imperial Court System, a network of non-profit charitable
organizations throughout the United States, Canada, and Mexico that
raises money for various beneficiaries. Sarria is much revered within
the hierarchy of the Imperial Court System and is affectionately and
informally known as "Mama" or "Mama José" among Imperial Court members. The "José Honors Awards" are presented to Imperial Court dignitaries and others in a bi-annual banquet held in Sarria's honor.
Sarria's
imperial-drag-themed funeral was held on September 6, 2013, at Grace
Cathedral of San Francisco, with the Right Rev. Marc Handley Andrus,
bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of California, presiding; some 1,000
mourners attended the service. Various
local and state elected officials participated, including California
State Sen. Mark Leno, former San Francisco mayor Art Agnos, San
Francisco Treasurer José Cisneros, and members of the San Francisco
Board of Supervisors. Leaders of the Imperial Court System and
the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence attended in full regalia, with the
formal mourning dress for the court dictated by Sarria in advance. Other dignitaries at the funeral included Stuart Milk, nephew of politician Harvey Milk and head of the Harvey Milk Foundation.
Immediately
following the funeral, a cortege of approximately 500 mourners
accompanied Sarria's body to Woodlawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Colma,
where he was buried with full military honors in a plot he had
previously purchased at the foot of the grave of Joshua Norton.