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Joseph Lobdell

19th century transgender man From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Joseph Lobdell
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Joseph Israel Lobdell (December 2, 1829 – May 28, 1912) was an American hunter and fiddler usually characterized as transgender man.[1][2][3][4] Lobdell was the subject of frequent negative media attention within his lifetime, which characterized his gender nonconformity as a form of insanity;[3] an 1877 New York Times article referred to Lobdell's life as "one of the most singular family histories ever recorded".[5] In later life, he was the subject of an early medical case study regarded as "the first United States to describe a person who would today be understood as transgender."[3] Writer William Klaber wrote an historical novel,[6] which was based on Lobdell's life. An 1883 account by P. M. Wise, which cast Lobdell as a "lesbian", was the first use of that word in an American publication.[7][4]

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Life

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Joseph Lobdell in later years

Joseph Lobdell was born December 2, 1829, to a working-class family living in Westerlo,[8] Albany County, New York. Lobdell married George Washington Slater, who was reportedly mentally abusive and abandoned Lobdell shortly after the birth of their daughter, Helen.[1] Lobdell was known for marksmanship and nicknamed "The Female Hunter of Delaware County".[9] Lobdell wrote a memoir about their hunting adventures, their disastrous marriage and their feelings about God, ending with a plea for equal employment for women.[1] Lobdell was also known to be an accomplished fiddle player and opened a singing school for a time.[10] While working at the singing school, Lobdell became engaged to a young woman. A rival for her affection learned Lobdell was female and threatened to tar and feather Lobdell. Lobdell's fiancé warned Lobdell, who escaped.[1] Lobdell received an Civil War pension[11] when Slater was killed in the war.[10] Lobdell entered the County Poor House in Delhi, New York, in 1860, where Lobdell met Marie Louise Perry.[10] Perry was a poor but well-educated woman, whose husband left her shortly after they eloped.[1] Lobdell later married Perry in 1861[12] in Wayne County, Pennsylvania. They spent years roaming the woods together with their pet bear, living in nomadic poverty, surviving off hunting, gathering and charity.[13] Then they were arrested for vagrancy and sent to Stroudsburg jail where "discovery that the supposed man was a woman was made".[13] Joseph was later arrested again for wearing male clothes. Marie wrote a letter using a stick and pokeberry ink begging the jail to free her husband.[1]

In 1879, Lobdell was taken away to the Willard Insane Asylum in Ovid, New York.[10] While in the asylum, Lobdell became a patient of Dr. P. M. Wise, who published a brief article, "A Case of Sexual Perversion", in which the doctor noted Lobdell said "she [sic] considered herself a man in all that the name implies".[14] Newspapers published two premature obituaries for Lobdell, first in 1879, then in 1885. Lobdell was presumed to have died on May 28, 1912.[1]

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See also

  • Harry Allen (1882–1922), American transgender man featured in sensationalist 20th-century newspaper coverage

References

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