John Richard "Jack" Nichols Jr. (March 16, 1938 – May 2, 2005) was an American gay rights activist. He co-founded the Washington, D.C., branch of the Mattachine Society in 1961 with Franklin E. Kameny. He appeared in the 1967 CBS documentary, CBS Reports: The Homosexuals, under the pseudonym Warren Adkins.
Biography
Nichols was born on March 16, 1938, in Washington, D.C. His father was an FBI agent.[1] Nichols was raised in Chevy Chase, Maryland, and came out as gay to his parents as a teenager.[2] His parents divorced, and his mother was subsequently married to William B. Southwick, an abusive alcoholic who lived in Cocoa Beach, Florida, for six years.[1] Nichols lived with the uncle and aunt of Iran's Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi for three years and learned Persian.[3]
Nichols co-founded the Mattachine Society of Washington in 1961 with Frank Kameny, and the Mattachine Society of Florida in 1965. The Mattachine Society of Washington was independent of the national Mattachine Society, which had formally disbanded a few months earlier.[2]
In 1967, Nichols became one of the first Americans to talk openly about his homosexuality on national television when he appeared in CBS Reports: The Homosexuals, a CBS News documentary. Though he allowed himself to be interviewed on camera, Nichols used the pseudonym "Warren Adkins" in the broadcast because of his father who was an FBI agent. His father had threatened him with death if the U.S. government found out Jack was his son and he lost his coveted security clearance.[7] The use of the name "Warren" was in deference to one of Nichols' early lovers he met when visiting his aunt and uncle in Neptune Beach, Florida, in 1961. Nichols had an early taste for simple country lovers and his lover, Warren, was from West Virginia. Eventually this passion for "hillbillies" would lead to the first great love of his life, Lige Clarke, who was from Kentucky.
Due to his appearance in the documentary, Nichols was fired from his job at the International Inn located in Washington, D.C. the day after it aired.[8]
Writing career
With his partner Lige Clarke, Nichols began writing the column "The Homosexual Citizen" for Screw magazine in 1968. "The Homosexual Citizen", which borrowed its title from the newspaper published by Mattachine D.C., was the first LGBT-interest column in a non-LGBT publication. As a result of this column, Nichols and Clarke became known as "The most famous gay couple in America."
In 1969, after moving to New York City, Nichols and Clarke founded GAY, the first weekly newspaper for gay people in the United States distributed on newsstands.[2] The publication continued until early 1974.[9] From 1977 to 1978, he served as the editor of Sexology. Nichols was hired in 1981 as the news editor of the San Francisco Sentinel.
In November 2010, Jack Nichols' friend, Stephanie Donald, began LGBT-Today.com, in tribute to Nichols and the Gay Rights Movement and got most of the original staff of GayToday.com together including Frank Kameny who wrote exclusively for LGBT-Today.com until his death on October 11, 2011.
Death
He died on May 2, 2005, of complications from cancer of the saliva gland.[10] His best friend, Steve Yates, was in attendance at the time of his death. Nichols's last request was to hear his favorite song, Rosemary Clooney's "Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye", which Yates played as Nichols slipped away.
^ abCharles, Douglas M. (Fall 2017). ""A Source of Great Embarrassment to the Bureau": Gay Activist Jack Nichols, His FBI Agent Father, and the Mattachine Society of Washington". The Historian. 79 (3): 504–522. doi:10.1111/hisn.12585. S2CID149293617.