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Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1955
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 32p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, very worn & dampstained digest size magazine in rusty stapled pictorial wraps. As is reading copy. How Much Do We Know About the Homosexual Male. Plato conclusion. At the Whipping Post. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1956
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 32p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, worn & dampstained digest size magazine in rusty stapled pictorial wraps. As is reading copy. "Canada: Sex Criminals and the Law" also "To the Women of One" One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1956
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 48p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, worn & dampstained digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps with rusty staples. As is. "Miami's New-Type Witch Hunt" Apparently the homophobia in Florida began much earlier than Anita Bryant's crusade! One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1956
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 48p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, worn & dampstained digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps with rusty staples. As is. An excerpt from "The Autobiography of Benvenuto Cellini". Church of England Recommendations on Homosexuality. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1956
Magazine / Periodical
Magazine. 48p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, worn & dampstained digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps with rusty staples. As is. Lyn Pedersen cover story "A Tribute to Dr. Kinsey." Tangents. Part 2 of "The Winner." How to End Hostility Toward Homosexuals. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1955
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 32p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, staples rusted, 1 inch closed tear on front wrap, else good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. Neurosis & Homosexuals. Tangents. Plato part 4. The Fallow Season poem by Allen. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1956
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 40p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, very good digest size magazine in lightly worn stapled pictorial wraps with ink date on cover. Lyn Pedersen story "The Ordeal of Prince Eulenberg" The Feminine Viewpoint column. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1957
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 24p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, lightly worn digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps with ink date on cover. Almost the entire issue concerns the court case of One, Inc. v. US Post Office. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1956
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 48p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, light wear, ink date on cover, good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. An excerpt from "The Autobiography of Benvenuto Cellini". Church of England Recommendations on Homosexuality. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1957
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 40p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps with ink on cover. Albert Ellis cover story "How Homosexuals can Combat Anti-Homosexualism" also Harry Otis' "A Bangkok Interlude" One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1957
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 24p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps with ink date on the cover. Cover stories: "You and the Law" by ACLU Attorney (Tietz) and "He's Got Neurotic Eyes" by Ruth M. Friedman. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One Magazine, 1954
Seller: Black Dog Books, Emerson, NJ, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine, Ink Name Stamp. 1st Edition. June 1954 issue. From the library of Henry Guze with his stamp and the stamp of his wife on the front endpaper. Henry Guze, M.D. was the founder of the American Academy of Psychotherapists and the Society for Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis and the co founder of the Society for the Scientific Study of Sex. Book. Book.
Published by One Magazine, 1954
Seller: Black Dog Books, Emerson, NJ, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good +, Ink Name Stamp. 1st Edition. October 1954 issue. From the library of Henry Guze with his stamp and the stamp of his wife on the front endpaper. Henry Guze, M.D. was the founder of the American Academy of Psychotherapists and the Society for Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis and the co founder of the Society for the Scientific Study of Sex. Book. Book.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1957
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 32p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. Cover story "Ann Carll reid and the Feminie Viewpoint" One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1955
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 24p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, small date in ink on cover, rusted staples else very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. Cover story by One, Inc.s Legal Counsel. Tangents short news & views (which would become the offshoot competitor to One Magazine). The Summer I Was twelve, story by Davis. The Feminine Viewpoint, a lesbian and feminist column. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1955
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 24p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, small date in ink on cover else very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. One-act play by Steve Whitney, "The Body Beautiful," "The Sex Urge in Prisons" Advertisement for "Game of Fools" by James Barr (Fugate). One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1956
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 32p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, ink date on cover else very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. "Canada: Sex Criminals and the Law" also "To the Women of One" One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1955
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 32p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. How Much Do You Know About the Homosexual Male? The Temporary Tiger, poem. Plato, concluding extract. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1957
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 32p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, ink date on cover else very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. Fall fund-drive letter laid-in. Cover story "Poems of Other Love" with photo of Alden Kirby, Umo's "The Echo of a Voice". Special focus on gay and lesbian poetry. Also a report on The Mattachine Society Convention. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1954
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 32p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. Includes cover story by Lyn Pedersen "England and the Vices of Sodom" a poem, "A Glimpse" by Walt Whitman and a Shakespeare sonnet. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1955
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 24p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, small date in ink on cover, soiling else very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. Cover story by James Douglas Margin, "The Margin of Masculinity" Advertisement for "Game of Fools" by James Barr (Fugate). One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1955
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 32p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. "Is Homosexuality a Vice?" by Serge Talbot. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1955
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 32p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. Neurosis & Homosexuals. Tangents. Plato part 4. The Fallow Season poem by Allen. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1956
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 32p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. "Canada: Sex Criminals and the Law" also "To the Women of One" One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1956
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 32p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. "Japanese Gay Life" article. The Feminine Viewpoint section with a story by Ganelle. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1955
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 24p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. Cover story by One, Inc.s Legal Counsel. Tangents short news & views (which would become the offshoot competitor to One Magazine). The Summer I Was twelve, story by Davis. The Feminine Viewpoint, a lesbian and feminist column. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1956
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 48p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, date in ink on cover else a very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. "Miami's New-Type Witch Hunt" Apparently the homophobia in Florida began much earlier than Anita Bryant's crusade! One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1956
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 32p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. "Male Homophile in Africa" "The Doctor and the Homosexual" articles. The Feminine Viewpoint. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1955
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 24p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Published by One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1957
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 48p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, wraps lightly worn, else very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. The Laughter of Antinous. The Little Guy. Edith. The Old Cavalryman. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.