Politics

Dick Leitsch, gay activist who led ‘sip-in,’ dies at 83

Dick Leitsch, right, with Randy Wicker, a fellow pioneering gay rights activist, in Manhattan, April 18, 2016. Leitsch, who in 1966 led a pioneering act of civil disobedience to secure the right of homosexuals to be served in a licensed bar, helping to clear the way for openly gay bars in New York State, died in Manhattan on June 22, 2018. He was 83. Karsten Moran / The New York Times

NEW YORK (AP) — A pioneering gay activist who led a 1966 “sip-in” at a New York City bar has died at the age of 83.

Dick Leitsch (LIGHTSH) died Friday at a hospice in Manhattan. His death from liver cancer was confirmed by his brother, John Leitsch, of Louisville, Kentucky.

Leitsch was a leader of the Mattachine Society, an early gay rights group.

His “sip-in” protest was meant to echo lunch counter sit-ins. Leitsch and three friends sat down at a bar and announced, “We are homosexuals.”

The bartender clapped his hand over Leitsch’s glass and refused to serve them. The moment was captured by a Village Voice photographer.

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The protest led the state liquor authority to end its practice of using patronage by gay people as an excuse to revoke liquor licenses.