Curated in conjunction with Alex Kabaj, Graduate Intern in the University’s Equality and Diversity Office, our display for LGBT+ History Month 2025 highlights the development and early activities of the student Gay Society at Strathclyde (now the LGBTQ+ Society).
Known as Gaysoc for short, the Gay Society was established in 1971, a decade before homosexuality was legalised in Scotland. Run by students, for students, it was the first such initiative at a Scottish university.
Gaysoc’s primary objective was to provide a safe, supportive and non-judgemental space for gay students (men and women) to meet each other, talk and socialise informally. The Society also organised annual programmes of meetings and social events, promoted through its regular column in the Strathclyde Telegraph student newspaper.
The display, which is part of an ongoing project to uncover Strathclyde’s LGBT+ history, features a selection of Gaysoc’s newspaper columns published between 1975 and 1992. As well as highlighting the Society’s activities and achievements, these emphasise the significant challenges faced by LGBT+ students over the period.
The Society, together with the Students’ Association at Strathclyde, also supported countrywide gay and lesbian rights campaigns organised by the National Union of Students and the Scottish Fight the Clause Campaign (a movement against the implementation of Section 28 of the Local Government Act 1988, which banned schools from teaching - or promoting - the acceptability of homosexuality). Two posters relating to these campaigns, illustrating the broader LGBT+ activism of the time, are included in the display.
The eventual repeal of Section 28 in the year 2000 was a significant win for LGBTQ+ rights in Scotland, but it also revealed the deep-rooted prejudices that still linger in society and its institutions. As we reflect on this turning point in our history, we are reminded that the fight for equality and acceptance is far from over.
The display can be viewed on Level 3 of the Andersonian Library throughout the month of February, during Library opening hours. Discover more activities and events on Strathclyde's LGBT+ History Month programme.
Content note: The archive materials presented include some strong language, homophobic slurs and stereotypes, and discussions of loneliness and poor mental health.
