History of Gay and Lesbian Life in Milwaukee, Wisconsin - People - Bios

 
Tammy Baldwin

Born:
Died:

(unknown)
(living)
Primary Involvements:

 
Openly Lesbian Politician

 

 

  1992 photo in Wisconsin Light

       
 

Tammy Baldwin is a prominent Wisconsin politician who has been openly lesbian virtually her entire career. Her public career began in Madison as a Dane County Supervisor. She then ran for and won a seat as congresswoman.

According to an article in the February 2004 issue of Madison Magazine:

    It was (in 1983) that a bright-eyed young lesbian from Smith College showed up for an internship at the governor's office. It was Tammy Baldwin's first taste of politics.

    "I got a glimpse of what happens behind the scenes and it was just a thrill for me," Baldwin, a native of Madison, recalls now. "It was probably the first time in the nation that [a gay or lesbian] could take a job in a governor's office and feel that supported."

    Traveling in well-worn tracks, Baldwin was elected to the Dane County Board in 1986, then went on to the State Assembly in 1992 and the U.S. House of Representatives in 1998, where she was not only the first known lesbian to serve in Congress, but also the first person -- G, L, B or T -- to have been out before being elected, something unimaginable 30 years earlier.

    (See the full article for much more about Tammy Baldwin.)

    (Written for Madison Magazine by Frank Bures, a freelance writer living in Madison.)

 


1988 Dane Co. Board of Supervisors


at a Rally


Dance party at Dish in Milwaukee


Feb. 1993 rally at Capitol supporting the right of gays to serve in the military


Article "How Gay Is Madison?"
(Madison Magazine, 2004)
(Reference to Baldwin is about halfway down the article.)

Credits: initial page creation by Don Schwamb;
Last updated: March-2007.