Case of soldier charged with being ‘disorderly in female attire’ among stories told in Queer Lives tour

In June 1916, a 22-year-old soldier from the Royal Fusiliers appeared at Highbury magistrates court charged with desertion and with “being an idle and disorderly person in female attire”. Though the soldier was charged under the name Frederick Wright, they appeared wearing a veiled hat, a wig and makeup, and told the court they wished to be known as Kathleen Woodhouse.

The soldier had already appeared in court earlier that year after attempting suicide, which was illegal at the time. They had been ordered to enlist in the army. When arrested for a second time, they had told police: “I wish I had been a woman, as I love wearing beautiful clothes and all my tastes are feminine.”

Queer Lives is at the Tower of London from 18-24 February 2023.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

NHS England plans dental ‘treatment blitz’ to tackle appointments backlog

New £50m funding pot allocated to help provide 350,000 extra slots –…

Macy’s Parade

Thanksgiving Day Parade

Independent pays out £5m in dividends and makes sixth consecutive year of profit

Pretax profit falls 66% year on year to £1.9m after editorial investments…