00:00:00Interview with Tom Brobson
Date of Interview: November 6, 2014
Interviewer: Sara Evenson
Assistant: Laura Keith
Place of Interview: Major Williams Hall Rm. 329, Virginia Tech
Length: 1:07:04
Transcriber: David Atkins
Sara Evenson: This is Sara Evenson, and I’m with Laura Keith doing an oral
history interview
with Mr. Tom Brobson. We are in room 329 of Major Williams Hall at the Virginia Tech
campus and it is Thursday November 6th just after 4:10 PM. Could you please say
your name and
birth date for us?
Tom Brobson: My name’s Tom Brobson and I was born April 8th, 1960.
EVENSON: Could you tell us a little bit about where you were born and what
growing up was
like?
BROBSON: That’s a curious question. I was born in the state of New York but I
didn’t live
there. It is a long story, but for various reasons my mother was in New York and
I was born in
New York. I grew up in Virginia, particularly up in
00:01:00Alexandria, Virginia.
EVENSON: I’m also from New York, so that’s interesting.
BROBSON: There was a polio outbreak and my uncle was a doctor and he didn’t want my
mother traveling. It’s a long and interesting story but, functionally born one
place but really
raised and grew up here in Virginia.
EVENSON: So how long were you in Alexandria?
BROBSON: Well, really until I came down here as a student in 1978, so for 18
years. Then,
came here as a student in 1978, graduated from Tech in 1982, went back to
Alexandria and lived
there and worked on Capitol Hill until 1989, and then shifted down here again.
00:02:00I actually came
and worked here at the University for 16 years, and with my partner bought a
Christmas tree
farm out in Giles County. We bought a farm and started a Christmas tree business
so we grow
Christmas trees there.
EVENSON: Okay. How would you identify yourself?
BROBSON: That’s a really interesting question too.
EVENSON: Well, I’ll give you a bit of background. We’ve been talking about different
communities and different ways that individuals identify themselves. Looking at
that as a class
we have developed how we as individuals self-identify.
BROBSON: I guess you know, you just took me through a contextual narrative so on
the biggest
level I would say I’m an American. On the second level I would say native
Virginian. I have
spent more time living in southern Appalachian than I have up in northern
Virginia, and even
when I lived in northern Virginia I spent time
00:03:00down here. So would describe myself as being a
Virginia Tech student or graduate, alum. And I would describe myself also as
being a gay man
who has lived through all those different pieces, as well. I’m also a farmer,
and I have Type 1
Diabetes, so I do lots of things that I can identify as being part of my life.
EVENSON: So I guess for the purposes of this interview we’ll kind of be focusing
more on
BROBSON: On the gay community.
EVENSON: That was going to be my next question. What community do you most feel
a part
of?
BROBSON: That’s an interesting question [laughs]. So I’m definitely part of the gay
community. I can’t help but be, right, it’s part of who I am. I identify
strongly with and have
always been an active part of the gay community
00:04:00since I was able to be, and am very much a part
of my community here in Giles County and here in Blacksburg. I identify as much
with being a
rural person living in southern Appalachia as I do with being a gay person, as
with being a
person with Type 1 Diabetes. All of which I strongly identify with cause that’s
what I, it is right?
I think I would describe myself as being fairly balanced in that. Is everything
gay for me? No. Is
it a big piece of what I am? Absolutely.
EVENSON: That’s great. So, jumping around a little bit. When you were here at
Virginia Tech
were there any specific communities that you were a part of, or any
00:05:00specific organizations that
you were a part of, as a student, and as a staff member?
BROBSON: So then this becomes the bigger part of the oral history, so I will do
my best to
answer that question, though it will be a long answer.
EVENSON: Feel free.
BROBSON: [pause] So when I came to Virginia Tech in 1978, there was no
identified gay
community. At that point we were just ten years after Stonewall and being gay
was something
that most people weren’t comfortable with and most people didn’t openly live
with. I would say
the vast majority of the gay community was closeted and in hiding.
I, for whatever reason, being precocious, had come out younger than maybe many.
So I
had come out, and coming out is a process. It’s a journey. It never ends. I
probably came out
00:06:00 first
to myself in 1974, and then sort of to other people in ’76, and then by the time
I came down here
there were some people who knew. My family didn’t know, but there were people
who knew.
And I was trying to find a way to connect with what I perceived to be my
community. I had had
the opportunity to go out in the gay neighborhoods of Washington D.C., and other
places, New
York City, Roanoke, and meet people at gay bars, and so had realized there was,
in fact, a
community. Because, otherwise, living in suburbia or urbia, living in the urban
areas you don’t
necessarily realize, certainly then, you didn’t realize that there was a
community. It was a
growing awareness that there was in fact a community that I very much felt like
I was a part of
even though I hadn’t actually been in it, which is a curious thing.
00:07:00And an incredibly freeing and
wonderful thing when you finally get to connect with it and realize, oh my gosh,
I’ve found
people that are like me. There’s all these guys here and they’re all thinking
the same thing I am,
[laughing] which is just fantastic, right?
So I came down here as a student and there were many of my friends who said you’re
crazy ‘cause you’re going to Virginia Tech and there can’t be anything down
there. And they
were right, there wasn’t. There was an attempt to form a student group in 1978
and ’79. I was not
one of the organizers, I was just a freshman and 18, but I connected with it.
There was a
gentleman who actually still lives in Blacksburg, Steve Knowles, who had gone to
Tech and who
was involved with it.
00:08:00There was a decision to try and do something to raise awareness that there
was in fact a gay community here in Blacksburg. So they, and you may have heard
about this
before, but there was a decision to try to have what we called a denim day. And
this one day out
of the week, in your support of the gay community, which I can honestly say was
not described
as LGBT or anything like that back then, none of those acronyms existed, support
of the gay
community you would wear denim to campus.
Tech in 1978 was pretty much a sea of denim, that’s all anybody wore. It was the 1970’s
and everybody wore denim. You didn’t get caught dead wearing khakis and being
preppy that
was UVA. Virginia tech was sort of blue jeans and T-shirts. I, in retrospect,
look at that and think
00:09:00we thought we were doing something that would be easy, but in fact we were
probably doing
something that was really challenging to the straight community. And so it was,
these things
become all confused in terms of sequencing, but I want to say that it was the
winter quarter. So
we used to do quarters back then and I think it was winter quarter not spring
quarter. So I am
going to say it was in February or March. The day dawned, and I think I have my
year right, I
think it was 1979, the day dawned and went on to campus and nobody was wearing
denim. We
had put the signs up around campus on bulletin boards and it almost had the
reverse effect.
Instead of creating the sense that there’s support for a community, it was the
no, you are not
supported and you are not welcome. That was pretty much the response. It was a
rare person that
you saw wearing denim that day, which was intimidating, frankly,
00:10:00very, very intimidating. And
people asking me, why are you wearing denim? I’m like well because, and then
that was always
an interesting moment. There was a couple, a man and a woman, over at Dietrick
and they were
both wearing jeans and they had t-shirts that said “nothing wrong with my
genes,” of course
spelled g-e-n-e-s. So you got a very powerful message there, that this was not
an accepting
community and that this was not something you should feel comfortable with.
At the same time, the Tech administration and university prohibited, they shut
us down,
they said that not only could we not exist but they prohibited us from ever
meeting on campus.
So we were thrown off of campus. The net effect was we had tried to do something
and not only
did we
00:11:00get shut down, but we actually took ourselves back what seemed to be several steps.
Although, sometimes I think being, we, you know your oppressed, but when you see overt
oppression, my instinct is to push back a lot harder. So it may have
consolidated the will of many
of us to try to do something still.
So we ended up having to shift meetings to the basement of the Presbyterian Church,
which allowed us to meet. And not much happened, not much happened, and so for
the next four
years, nothing that I can recall happened on the campus. But, through that and
other mechanisms,
going out and meeting people, we used to, there’s a Marriott over towards
University Mall, it’s
not there anymore, but we used to go dancing pretty much Thursday night, Friday night,
Saturday night with friends. And there were
00:12:00always a couple of gay guys there and we would
always see each other. We could never dance with each other, but there are tons
of memories.
And we should make a side note that I tell the story of when I did dance with a
man on the dance
floor in Blacksburg.
EVENSON: I’m making a note.
BROBSON: But yeah, so you got to know people. And as you got to know people you
had a
chance to start to develop a community, albeit secret, and there were people in
fraternities, and
the German Club, and university faculty, it was, as we know, everywhere. But all
hidden, all, I
used to say we were members of the club, but we knew who the members were and
other people
didn’t. And you spent a lot of time trying to figure out who might be a member
of the club, so it
was an interesting time. And through those four years as an undergraduate
00:13:00at Tech I did develop
a good group of friends who were gay. But I always, I had straight roommates who were
incredibly supportive, and we, I, I touched all pieces, right? It never solely
defined me, it was
just a part of who I was.
So then there’s like side journeys we can take here. Some of us wanted to still
have some
sort of a presence on campus, and for a number of different reasons that have to
do with my
personal life and my family, I had...I needed a constructive outlet. The basic
line was that my
family had disowned me for being gay when I was about 20, 19...20, and I needed
to be doing
something that I felt was
00:14:00constructive as opposed to being pounded on from great heights. So I,
again through a friend, was put in contact with faculty that were teaching
sociology classes and
psychology classes, human sexuality classes, where they were looking for a
member of the gay
community that would be willing to speak to students. And I decided after
conferring with my
straight roommates, asking them whether they felt this was okay with them
because I didn’t want
to imperil their lives, whether they felt this would be a good idea. And this
really was something
that did then mean, you know, you might end up being beat up or physically
abused or killed.
And all those things happened. But they said yeah, we’ll support you and we’ll
even come to the
classroom and sit in the back. So that was, that was an incredibly affirming moment.
So I started speaking to those classes in my Junior year, and
00:15:00I want to say this would have
been 1980 I think, and I talked to a lot of classes. Sat at the front up on the
podium at McBryde
100 in front of a giant human sexuality class and over in what we then called
the Animal Science
Building which is the Litton-Reeves, and the big auditorium in front of classes,
and it was
curious because sometimes there were classes like, I can’t remember if they were
sociology or
psych classes, but the sections, one of them was deviant subcultures. And I just remember
thinking ‘oh, here I am, a deviant subculture.’ So, you know, I would strive to
go up onto that
stage and look like exactly what I was – a student. I’d have my Virginia Tech
t-shirt on and a
pair of jeans, and here’s this, I’m just this guy, and this is just who I am.
And got a lot of,
00:16:00 the
faculty were fairly supportive but again, secretively because again they knew
that they could get
in trouble. There were definite parts of the University that weren’t very
comfortable with the idea
that we were having these kinds of talks, even if it was built into class work,
even it was
described as being part of deviant subcultures.
And then came the reality of the classes, and for the most part, people were
indifferent, or
they didn’t actively hate. But there were moments when people asked very harsh
questions and
people would become abusive after the class. So it was an immensely difficult
thing to do and
I’m pretty sure I lost weight just sweating it, but managed to do it and better
for it.
00:17:00And felt like I
was at least trying to make it clear that on the campus there were people who
just were living
their lives and who didn’t all fit into this one particular view of the world.
So, that kind of
happened. And that was about it if I think in terms of formal Virginia Tech interactions.
There were all the things happening over in social life. You know I referenced dancing,
so there was a place that was the old Kroger downtown became, is now the
bookstore, the Tech
bookstore, but it was a dance place called After Sundown, sometimes called After Scumdown,
that was pretty dark. You could get nickel beers on the right night and quarter
pitchers, it was
beer and dancing. Drinking age was much lower then, and we’d go there with
friends and with
girls and we would go dancing. And one time
00:18:00the girls we had gone with were out dancing and I
was with a friend of mine who was a native of Blacksburg and one of our favorite
pieces of
music came on. And we thought, damn there’s no one to dance with and we want to
dance. So
After Sundown had multiple level dance floor. It was stainless it was [white?]
you’d just have to
have seen it to understand it. It was a different era. And this was up on the
raised section and
there was a full dance floor, and we, Kenny and I, he just looked at me and said
“You want to
dance?” and I was like “yes” so we decided to dance.
So we stepped out on the dance floor, and amazingly, the dance floor emptied. Everyone
left the dance floor. It was just people were shocked to see two men dancing
together which
seems so bizarre, but that’s the way it was. One of my dear friends, Sherry Sandler,
00:19:00she actually,
worrying that we were about to see something really bad happen, there were
football players
there, and there were all sorts of bad vibe and Kenny and I were trying to
finish the song, and
you don’t want to hang your head and leave until the song ends, she actually
came out and
started dancing with us to try to sort of change it into a there’s three people
here and one of them
is of a sex that is non-threatening. And the song ended and the manager came and
we were asked
to leave, and they called the Blacksburg Police Department. So I wondered
whether we were
going to get arrested. The police kind of left us alone. They just said “why
don’t you guys just
stop doing stuff like that,” and kind of berated us about our morality but
didn’t arrest us – thank
goodness.
So there were those moments, right? And I’m making this all sound terribly
negative, this
is a
00:20:00story that, of course, lives forever in our memories because we’re like,
“remember that time
when we all did that?” but you couldn’t ever let go of the fact that there was
open and real
hostility. I can’t for the life of me remember, I was trying to think of the
name as I was driving
over here his sister works in the College of Architecture now, there was another
local young man
who was out, and this would’ve been I think the spring of ’82 but it might’ve
been the spring of
’81, I just can’t recall, and he was very visible. He was very in your face,
whereas I was just
walking around in blue jeans and a Tech t-shirt he kind of had a punk look going
and he didn’t
pretend that he wasn’t a member of a deviant subculture. And he was found
killed. He’d been
castrated and his genitalia had been stuffed in his mouth.
00:21:00So we all knew that this was a harsh
reality that there was violence. I was attacked, I guess several times, and got
away each time
without physical injury, but knew too that there was nothing I could do. I
couldn’t go to the Tech
administration or to the Virginia Tech police because I had already been told we weren’t
supposed to be on campus. So it was, ‘hey, you know, you made your own problems
here kid so
get out of here.’
But there were also moments of amazing kindness. I had a faculty member who really
reached out. He was in the College of Agriculture, and he and his wife really
reached out and
supported me. I had a guy who was a football player who actually saw a group of
guys from the
Corp of Cadets, sort of,
00:22:00had stopped me and slashed the tires on my bike, believe it or not, and he
stepped up and said “Tom anything wrong?” He knew me from, we were in class
together, and I
said “no, nothing wrong” and he basically stayed with me until they decided to
fade away and
then he walked with me to a place where I could kind of be safe. So you saw
moments of what I
would call true courage and great compassion. So, and it didn’t hurt that he was
very handsome,
so it was a, in retrospect, it was a brutal time, but I was in my teens and
early twenties and it was
just the life I was living and this was pretty much how it was everywhere in America.
You didn’t, there wasn’t any place, you could go to Greenwich Village, or you
could go to
Dupont Circle, San Francisco, and find places and you could maybe feel
00:23:00comfortable but even
there it was hidden and it was secretive.
Gay bars were always in the worst possible neighborhoods because nobody wanted
to be
seen by, you know, their neighbors going in to that kind of a place. So you
would be in the
absolute worst neighborhoods with knifings and muggings, and yet having a great
time because
you were going to go dancing and hang out with other people that were like
yourself. So that
was, I feel like that was super harsh and negative and the overall experience of
being at Virginia
Tech was actually positive and I met amazing people that are friends to this
day. And I guess
built the muscle that sort of took me through the rest of my life. But it was
not easy. And it was
not fun. It would be really interesting to find that history of- my friend who
knew that person
who was killed sadly had a stroke last April
00:24:00or I could just ask him his name, but I’m sure we can
find it. We should go looking. And his sister, he was native, and his sister,
was it Epperly? His
sister worked at the College of Architecture. I was also in the Collegiate
Times. In the early 90’s
I wrote a letter or an article about it and she wrote in. So I know it’s out
there we can find it. I
just can’t for the life of me remember the name anymore.
EVENSON: Do you remember about what year that was?
BROBSON: I want to say it was the spring of ’82; it could’ve been the spring of
’81. I know it
was spring and he was found downtown behind the dumpster. I don’t know, I think
it was
eventually considered solved, but it was certainly not prosecuted as a hate
crime, it was simply
prosecuted as a murder, which is just crazy. But it puts it all in context,
right? So everybody was
aware but everybody knew that you had to be careful
00:25:00and that you couldn’t be yourself. And
that’s unfortunate. The community as a whole suffers when people can’t be who
they are.
EVENSON: So did the Presbyterian Church know about what your group was?
BROBSON: Oh, absolutely!
EVENSON: And were they supportive?
BROBSON: Yes, they were. Catherine- yes there weren’t many churches but the Presbyterian
Church here in Blacksburg was supportive and definitely allowed us to use their
facility. We did
not meet regularly after that first year, that I can recall. There could be
other people that met but
I simply fell out of it. After that it was, the university was pretty effective
at shutting things
down. So, if we fast forward, then, to 1989 when I came back to work on campus.
We had a new
President, Dr. McComas,
00:26:00who was a lovely man, and his Special Assistant to the President was a
woman named Carol Nickerson, she’s still here, lives in this area, she is a
lovely person and we
began a move to change the Virginia Tech Equal Opportunity Statement to include sexual
orientation, and he supported it, as did Carol. And with their support and lots
of maneuvering,
that was added. And It had some opposition but did surprisingly well. And again,
these are things
that would have been written up in things like the CT [Collegiate Times], but so
we got it done
and previous to that, while I had been gone, a gay student group had started to
develop. Lambda
Horizons, I believe? But it was still not officially sanctioned. It was not
00:27:00a University sanctioned
student organization.
So with the addition of the sexual orientation clause, then I and a few others
could go to
the administration and say “okay, you don’t discriminate against anybody on the
basis of sexual
orientation, it’s time to allow this student group to become official.” And,
again with the support
of the President, we were able to do that. It’s not an overstatement to say that
we would not have
been able to do that if he had not supported us. If the President hadn’t said,
“yes, go do this,”
there would have been, there were plenty of sites around campus and in student
life that would
have opposed the idea. So we formed this student group, and at the same time,
along with
another woman named Sarah Richardson, who lives in Richmond now I think, she was a
graduate student here at tech at the time, we formed the
00:28:00LGBT Caucus, to create something for
the faculty and staff. And again it was mostly young people that were willing to
come to that
older faculty, at first, didn’t, I don’t think, feel very comfortable. We knew
who they were, but
they didn’t feel that they could afford to be visible without jeopardizing their
status in their
departments. So it tended to be the younger faculty and graduate students, and
myself, and other
staff. And even us, even we were running a risk. But we formed that group, and,
in order to form
the student group, we had to have a faculty member who was willing to be the
faculty advisor.
And we couldn’t find anyone. Even the gay men and women on campus that were tenured
faculty, they were
00:29:00too fearful of the implications or unwilling to take it on.
And I was at that time a staff not a faculty appointment, later I had a faculty appointment
and was able to become an advisor but we knew that Jo Ann Underwood, whose name
you may
have heard, worked, was the Head of Student Health, she had been willing to
support us in a
number of circumstances, particularly with AIDS awareness, and was clearly a
champion for the
gay community. So I went to her, with I think a couple others, and asked her if
I did all of the
work, she was way overworked, if I did all the work and support with the student
group would
you put your name down as being the advisor? And she said “absolutely.” So that
allowed us
then to formally create the student group and the first president was a guy
named Brian
McConnell.
00:30:00He was from San Francisco. He, I think he was the president at that moment, I’m
pretty sure, and that allowed us for the first time to go to the student budget
board and actually
get some dollars to spend on something for the gay community. Our idea was to
have a dance,
and it was like at Halloween. Anyway, we did it, but these were huge victories.
We felt like we had come a bazillion miles just because we were able to get a student
group on the campus and actually get some dollars allocated from the student fee
and use them to
support this. We still had to be super careful. We had to host it in a place
where we could, sort
of, control who was seeing what and not have to worry about violence. We had the
first National
Coming Out Day on the Tech campus, and that was a big effort. It was in October
and I want to
say that this was
00:31:001990? It might be ’91. Again, it would be in the Collegiate Times. We were
given permission to do it on the lawn near Henderson, which didn’t look like the
way it does
right now. So we did it, and we actually rented a number of video/cassette
recorders, which were
huge back then, and had key people positioned to record what was happening both
for posterity,
and I have no idea where those tapes are, as well as a security precaution so we
could document
anything that happened. And as fate had it, a group of guys from the Corps of
Cadets came and
decided to heckle and harass the group and make life difficult. As a result of
that tape, however,
the Commandant said
00:32:00the next year “no more of that.” And never that I know of had any more
issues with the Corps coming in and deciding to heckle us.
In retrospect it’s astonishing to think that anybody is threatened by another person’s
stated sexual preference. It’s kind of silly that you would, out of all the
things going on on the
Virginia Tech campus, that a group of guys would want to come over and purposely
heckle a
group of students celebrating National Coming Out Day. It’s kind of silly but
that’s the reality.
That was the reality. So, we started to see what I would call progress and then
we started,
beginning, I don’t, there was no comprehensive business plan here, There was no comprehensive
strategic plan for how are we going to shift the world into a better place. I
had immediately
picked up and started to do
00:33:00the talks again, on campus, in the classrooms. And we were still
having to work hard to find people, enough people, to meet the need. I would say
the tone had
changed. There were more faculty wanting to use those kinds of speakers.
But we didn’t have a master plan that was building out of how are we going to
try to get
Virginia Tech to go places, right. We tried to go and talk to HR and say why
can’t the spouses
and children of same-sex couples have insurance and so on, and they would say
it’s because it’s
not lawful at the state level. And they did not blow us off. There’s a
wonderfully generous man,
Doug Martin, who worked there, he’s retired now, who...he was always open to us.
He was
always willing to talk even though he didn’t have a way to fix it. We, one of
the early projects,
we would have various meetings and we would try to think of things and one of
those was the
Safe Zones project, which proved to be quite an
00:34:00impact. Carol Lahass is a faculty member in
Forestry and there was a graduate student – Sandra, Sandy? – who was from the
University of
Maine, she was lovely. We, a number of us, we started to build out and we went
to the various
departments and offices and said, “We want to be able to put this sign up so
that a member of the
gay community would know that this is a safe place if something bad is
happening, or if they
needed to talk to somebody, or they...” and slowly, it was a limited enrollment
to begin with, but
slowly, over a number of years, we were able to grow that program and gain more
and more
allies across the campus. National Coming Out Days became much more robust and
had more
activities going on. I guess on some level, I say this often in what I do, that
you should never
underestimate the value of leadership. You don’t know it when you’re doing it,
it just feels scary,
but you’ve taken a
00:35:00step and you’re starting to lead and before you know it other people are
willing to come and then suddenly, it’s a whole ‘nother world. So we had, by
this time, listservs
had started to arrive and we could start to communicate regularly and put blasts out.
And so it felt like there were real triumphs but there were also setbacks. I
worked in the
Office of University Development, so it was a fundraiser for Tech, and that
office also has the
Office of University Relations, and we had been trying to get Tech to do, so I
should also say I
have worked closely on many occasions with members of other minority communities
on the
Tech campus, so the women’s groups, the women’s center, with the African American
community. I grew up in a community that was 30% African American and I came to Virginia
Tech and you wouldn’t have thought there was another African American anywhere
in the
00:36:00 state.
So Beth Watford was a tremendous ally. She’s Dean in the College of Architecture and
Engineering. And we had been trying to get the Tech magazine to do an article on diversity
which, again, to our ears right this minute seems like “duh, no brainer,” and at
that time was
incredibly controversial. The idea that we would do something that focused on
women, that
focused on the African American community, that focused on Hispanics, that was
really not
something people were comfortable with. And when we touched the gay community
they really
got uncomfortable. But the writer and editor, David Watts, said “I want to do
this and I want to
include you guys.” Now we had just had a murder up on the Appalachian trail
00:37:00of a Tech student,
a lesbian, who was there with her partner, and we wanted to have her sister, who
is also a
lesbian, be interviewed. And then I agreed to be interviewed.
So they wrote the article. And it all seemed to go fine until they reached the review
process and it got to the President’s office and suddenly I got a phone call
from the editor saying
“we have a problem.” “Are you okay if we have a problem?” I’m like, “I don’t
know if I’m okay
if we have a problem, what’s the problem?” “Well, the problem is they are okay
talking about a
woman who’s a lesbian but they don’t want to have you, a gay male, in the
article.” And so I
said, “Gee, I think there’s a problem here” because technically we don’t
discriminate but I feel
like I’m really crunched here. And oh yeah, by the way, this is of course my
boss. So,
00:38:00it was
actually at the Vice President’s level, and I’m not using any names, but I
could, and in the end
the article ran without me, so I was, in fact, pulled.
It was a reminder that we had a long ways to go. And that fundamentally, the Tech
community was not comfortable with the idea of people openly... it was now, at
this point, I
would say we had started to reach a point of ‘oh, okay, it’s okay if you’re a
student but if you are
a professional adult, this should just be invisible.’ And this is, of course, at
a moment when the
gay rights movement was trying to grow very, very powerfully and one of the big,
biggest things
was NOT being invisible. That we needed to be visible. And being visible was
what would get
people to realize that this community was all around them, they just had no
clue. So
00:39:00a lot of
effort then went into trying to do that. I still don’t know if they ever did a
feature article on the
Virginia Tech gay community, it would be interesting to take this oral history
and turn it into a
history and put it into the Tech magazine. It also shows you how risk-adverse
administrators are.
It’s not that these people were bad people or that they were unwilling to
support things, they
have to administer a large university and have an alumni base that by definition
is older and they
are worried about what the impact will be for fundraising, for loyalty of the
alumni base, of
people who might want to come here. Right, they weren’t bad people, they just,
had to be
inherently conservative in their approach and they might tell you that in
person, you know, “I
support you” but, but, but, but, there would always be buts.
00:40:00And so not much fun, it was not
much fun.
The story goes on and on and on. I was, and this was actually documented, I’m on film
somewhere that I was, HR used to use for a new orientation video and we’ll see
if you guys can
find it, for many years I was a featured speaker because- on that tape- because
I related a story of
having a boss who one time came in to me and he said, “You know, there’s this
other employee
and I’m a little worried about him.” “And, “well what do you mean you’re worried
about him?”
“Well, you know, he seems like he’s a little light in the loafers.” So here’s a
boss talking to an
openly gay man. He’s new to the university. He doesn’t know much about me.
00:41:00He assumes
because I have a pickup truck and a farm, I guess, that maybe I’m not gay, I
don’t know. And
he’s come to talk to me about another employee who isn’t gay, or ostensibly
isn’t gay and he’s
worried about him. “I’m not sure we want to have this person in front of people
and doing the
kinds of work that we do.” So, I basically stood there and looked at him and
said “I’m not sure
you really understand who you’re talking to or what you’re doing here,” but he
still never really
heard me. Curiously, it was his support person, Donna, who really- she kinda
went in there and
just let him have it, like “You have no clue what you just did and what that
sounded like.” And
again, this person was not a bad person. I still know him to this day, but this
gives you sense of it
was okay in the workplace to talk about these sorts of things and to express a willingness,
00:42:00or to
discriminate against somebody based on sexual orientation.
So all of this is mixed in there, and it was my boss’s worst nightmare that one
of our
older alumni would find out that I was gay and yet I would be in the Collegiate
Times. And so
one time, a rather malicious person, made sure that that happened and sure
enough, the older
alum that I knew had got very upset. There were also older alums that were
thrilled. That’s not
the point. The point is that either we believe in something as a community or we
don’t, and Tech
was having trouble, and probably still to this day has trouble, deciding whether
it believes in
something or not. The State of Virginia has something like 19-20% African American
population, but that is not what you see on this campus. There’s lots of reasons
for that, not an
easy [BROBSON’s phone chimes]
00:43:00thing to fix. But, point being, [BROBSON turns down his
phone volume] (I’ll do that so it doesn’t clink again at us) growth and
advancement does not
come hand in hand and you do things and see some things come together on one
side, but there’s
inertia and people with varying agendas, not malicious, not attempting to be
hurtful, although
sometimes meaning to be hurtful, trying to do what they perceive to be their
right thing in the
social norms of that moment. And, not having any clue what that really looked
like or felt like to
live with. Part of this then, to tell you the happy part of it and the part of
me, then, that began to
realize “wow, screw all these older people because this is going to fix itself.”
So I had started talking to classes, as I say back in,
00:44:00let’s see, it was 1980, and by the mid
90’s, I noticed that things were changing. I could be talking to a classroom of
young people and I
would actually get a question or two as opposed to sort of stoic silence, we’re uncomfortable
talking about this topic. Again, like, this is a strange topic, right, I’m just
talking about the fact
that I prefer to date men. I have a husband and we have a farm. You know, why
should that be
threatening, but it was. But I started to get questions and that was kind of
interesting, realizing
people’s comfort level had reached a point where they can ask questions and
they’re not, you
know, “Have you read the Bible? Are you going to burn in hell?” questions or one
person asked
me back in the 80’s “Have you ever considered committing suicide, and if not,
why not?” So
those kinds of harsh questions. The questions had
00:45:00shifted to “How was it as a person, what’s it
like to come out?” “Was it hard to meet other people?” “Do you think things are
getting better?”
Questions that actually indicated that the students were interested in me as a
person, and in the
community that I represented.
And then I’d say, another year or two later, I noticed as class would end, at
first it was
young women, it would be the young women, obviously least threatened, who would
stay after
class to ask me a couple questions or share a couple stories. “I have a brother
who’s gay” “I have
an uncle who we don’t talk about it in the family, but he’s and his partner...”
and I thought this
was wonderful, right? This just felt like, whoa, this is huge progress. And then
Buffy the
Vampire Slayer started to be
00:46:00broadcast, which for some reason in my mind is always the moment
that I started to say things really shifted, because there was a lesbian love in
there with Willow
and Tara. And then I started to see, so now you’re into the middle ‘90s, 96, I
don’t know what
year that show began, but I found that young men and young women asked
questions. And
young men and young women would stay after. Or there would be gay people in the classroom
who would actually raise their hands and say “thank you I’m also a member of
this community.”
And the visibility factor started to grow and the comfort level started to grow.
So this was
wonderful, right? This is the, in my mind and in my life history I have tracked
from this
American youth that are hostile to American youth that are totally getting this
and making me
realize that OK, someday this will be
00:47:00not a big deal. And that was a wonderful thing. And by the
turn of the century it felt like, wow, we’re gonna get somewhere.
Sadly, shortly after the turn of the century, we had a Board of Visitors and a particular
individual on the Board of Visitors that decided that Tech should not be going
down this road.
And so, I don’t know if you’ve heard any of this history, but if you talk to
Dean Depauw and
Shelly Fowler you’ll hear about it, but we had a spousal hire essentially that
was done and it led
to a move to remove sexual orientation from, and that was, in fact, struck off.
So after having
been there for more than a decade they removed, and we had no state protections.
There is no,
there is at this point no, now only the Supreme Court action has finally brought
us what I would
call protections and civil rights. Virginia, for all that it led in the American Revolution,
00:48:00does not
like to lead when it comes to civil rights issues or liberty issues. So we
actually had a move on
the Board of Visitors and they actually reversed a decade’s plus worth of
precedent and tried to
take us back to a place and prevent that hire and making life incredibly
uncomfortable for all
people involved. It, frankly, became a crucible and it was a moment where people
had to , you
couldn’t get away from it, you had to either stand up and say “this is what we
believe or we
don’t” and so the President of the University, Dr. Steger, whom I worked for for
many, many
years, finally had to say “this is wrong, this is what we believe in.” And
others did that and
eventually a majority of the Board of Visitors also did that, and it was
reversed. Not without
having done a lot of damage. Not without having created a heck of a lot of
00:49:00stress and very, very
difficult moments. But it just showed you that once again the youth were leading
and the elders
were laying way, way, way, way, way behind. So, I think I’ve sketched out a
whole lot there for
you guys and you’ve been good to just let me sort of go on. And I’ve tried to do
it sort of
chronologically but there’s tons of more pieces I could touch on but hopefully
that gave you a
good sense of what this journey has been like.
EVENSON: Yeah, definitely. That was great. Going through all of your stories it
sounds like...
BROBSON: There’s a lot and that’s only a few of them.
EVENSON: Well it sounds like you were actively engaged in activism. Would you
call yourself
an activist?
BROBSON: [Laughs, then a long pause] Yes, I guess I would. I didn’t tend to
think of myself
particularly as an activist but clearly my actions demonstrate that I’m an activist,
00:50:00right? My goal
in being an activist was never to make other people’s lives miserable. But it
had everything to do
with my right to liberty and the pursuit of my happiness and to be left alone to
do those things.
So, you know, there are many schools of thought in the world of activism and one
of those is –
activism is to provoke a response. Gandhi certainly believed this. And had I
studied things like
that? No. Was I trying to provoke a response? Yes. Though maybe not the response
that people
thought. I wasn’t...I was not particularly interested in,
00:51:00this was not a moment of saying “this is all
about me, look at me, pay attention to me,” this was a moment of saying “leave
me alone, just,
bloody, leave me alone. I want to live my life and you are seriously in the way
of me living my
life. And you don’t even realize it, you’re not even thinking about it, but you
are.” You know,
every moment of my adult career, until I left Tech, I had to be careful. I had
to think about is this
going to impact my ability to be promoted and actually to be fairly certain that
it definitely had
an impact. To know that people were looking at me through that lens and judging
me through that lens,
that was clearly a piece that was going on. I couldn’t help but be...so, yes, I
was an activist. But my
activism was motivated around the idea that I would describe as letting a
community...valuing a
community
00:52:00for what it has to contribute and what it offers, that it’s already doing and is
doing secretly.
So there wonderful gay couples and individuals in theater arts and in music and
in engineering
and in every field and endeavor within the New River Valley community, and they
were all valued. And it
was like, “oh, he’s that creative gay guy.” But it wasn’t just simply he’s a
member of the community and
this is just the rich tapestry that is a diverse community and why this should
be valued. Yes, again I’ve
gone off on a soapbox again.
EVENSON: No, that’s fine. We’re almost out of time.
BROBSON: Yep.
EVENSON: Is there anything else that you’d like to add?
BROBSON: Well, it was lovely. So...then as you know the State of Virginia passed
a constitutional
amendment
00:53:00prohibiting rights for the gay community. And, I actually don’t have my ring on.
My partner
and I had gotten married in 2004. We had flown out to San Francisco. Actually
one of the students, Brian
McConnell, the one I had mentioned early was the Student Board President of the
student group, was
actually working out in San Francisco in the City Hall when Mayor Newsome opened
up and said “I’m
going to allow gay marriage.” Which was a remarkable watershed moment and mostly
just people from
California went and got married but there were some people, like myself and my
partner, we’d been
together twenty years, and we, independently, just both thinking on our own,
decided you know it’s our
twentieth anniversary we should fly out and get married. And we did. And that
was actually celebrated.
My office held a little party for me and my bosses
00:54:00were, this is, congratulations, but again, it was all down
low. And it’s not exactly marriage but I didn’t honestly believe that I needed
to be married. I always, sort
of, marriage is this whole straight thing and I wish I had the legal
protections. But once I was married, I
realized “Holy crap” I really need this affirmation, this support, all that this represents.
And then I really focused on this and realized that separate but equal is not
acceptable. We as a
nation we’ve proven that we don’t do well with that. So I began to really then
believe in the whole gay
marriage idea and happily we’ve just seen here in the last 60 days that the
Supreme Court has allowed
that to happen. So now here in the State of Virginia I am lawfully married and
my partner and I, we
actually, that first marriage eleven years ago was set aside by the
00:55:00Supreme Court, and so we went
back this last March and got married again in California, which was lawful. The
Supreme Court
had already okayed that. And we were wondering how long it would take in
Virginia, and had
thought that it might take fifteen years. That’s what many of us had thought. We
actually had
talked to the ACLU about being the litigants in the court case, and they said
you need to
anticipate that this will be a seven to fifteen year process, at least a seven
year process. And then,
boom, right we see how fast things are changing. I think this becomes a non
issue now. I don’t
find that many [BROBSON’s phone chimes again “It’s people I’m meeting for
dinner.”] that
people care anymore. This is going out with a whimper, not with a bang. I once
asked my father
what it was like when prohibition ended and he said by the time prohibition
00:56:00ended nobody cared
because everybody knew it was stupid law. And I think that by the time gay
marriage is fully
legalized and all this is history people will realize it never really mattered.
That’s a lot of history. There’s lots of other stories to tell but I think that
gives you a
strong sense of my piece in there and my perspectives of it. There were a lot of remarkable
moments that should be captured. I’m trying to think of other people that you
should talk to. I
think there are people I know whose oral histories could be amazing to get, if
you could get
them. There were people who were, say in, who were not open, who were not
activists while
they were students at Tech, who came out afterwards, and their view of what it
was like to be on
the Virginia Tech campus at that time. It’s not always a pretty picture. It’s
not always very
pleasant. But it was, I think there’s probably,
00:57:00I could certainly reach out to some people and see
if they are willing to talk to you guys. There were faculty who, from the
sixties, and the
seventies, and the fifties, who had to lead truly closeted lives. And yet, would
still be a resource
to us as young people who were trying to come out. They were never comfortable
with the fact
that we were trying to be more visible. And in some ways I find myself never as [BROBSON’s
phone chimes “Sorry, what are you going to do, confirming which place we are
meeting at.” He
replies to the message.] I forgot my thread. It...I forgot the thread, anyway,
you guys will come
00:58:00back to it. As you hear all of that what does it make you guys want to ask?
EVENSON: All of the questions that we’d thought about beforehand you talked
about. The
questions that I mainly have are, you know, hearing about these hate crimes that
happened in
Blacksburg, do you feel that the community has changed now? Do you feel safer
and more
welcome in the greater Blacksburg community now?
BROBSON: [Lengthy pause] Marginally, but not fully.
EVENSON: No?
BROBSON: Marginally, but not fully. I mean I, now I live in a rural area and I
have my farm
and my partner and I are very open about who and what we are and we have always
been well
received and supported as being members of a community. But then we are very
active in our
community. We try to give back to it in many ways. And that helps, but I don’t
kid myself that
00:59:00there are not lots of hate-filled people out there who are unwilling to accept
change. I will tell
you there’s a book I will write someday called Confessions of a White Man, which
will be all
about the things that people have told me because they assume as a white man I
would be in
sympathy with them. So I can recall, well into the nineties, sitting in a chair
getting my hair cut
and having a person tell me “well I don’t care if they let black people come to
Virginia Tech but
I would never let one in my house.” Let one? Like, one? What the hell is that?
So you can’t ever
pretend that everybody moves at the same pace. What you can hope is that these
things fade with
time. When I was growing up the “n” word was not an unfamiliar word and it was
used way,
way too often and now you don’t hear it
01:00:00very often, and we’re shocked to hear it. Nobody thinks
twice about women in the workplace and women, I mean, I remember when it was a
big deal for
women to wear slacks. So things change but not all at once. So, yes I feel much
safer in this
community but I don’t feel as safe as, probably, I ultimately would like to be
one day.
EVENSON: So, are you still active as an activist, not on the Virginia Tech
campus? In your
community you said you were active as an individual?
BROBSON: I’ve always been active wherever I’ve worked. And I’m still, my partner
and I are
active and are activists in trying to protect our piece of rural Appalachia from
giant pipelines that
are going to try to be built or power lines that were threatened. We
successfully fought off, even
bigger than the pipeline right now, in the nineties we took very prominent
01:01:00leads in doing that. So
I’m very much- I think once you...some people are born to be activists or are
willing to become
activists, it’s hard to say “No.” Although it’s very exhausting and there’s
moments when you
have to say no. I have Type I Diabetes and now I work for JDRF, which is the
group that’s
working to cure Type I Diabetes. If you guys want to have fun you can Google me,
or put in
YouTube, just type my name and you’ll see me talking...have you already done that?
EVENSON: We’ve done that, yeah.
BROBSON: So, yeah, I guess I’m an activist. I don’t think of myself as an
activist but I’m an
activist [laughs]. I am not as active in the gay community here locally as I
wish I could be
because my work with JDRF consumes so much of my time. But I certainly give it
my support
whenever I can. And that’s probably why I ended up here talking to you guys.
EVENSON: Well we definitely appreciate you coming in. And...
BROBSON: So you guys have done your research on me. It’s scary if you Google my
name, it’s
like whoa this guy’s like
01:02:00seriously here. It used to also be that you could find a lot of the old
articles and stuff from the Collegiate Times and even email threads from, there
was, I don’t
know, I think Google may now help to thin this down, but in the pre-web world
and pre-email
world we had a system called PROFS, which was on the mainframes, it’s ancient technology,
and we could – I could send a note to a colleague across the university or to a
friend at the
University of Syracuse or Syracuse University because all of these academic
institutions were on
this main system. It’s what actually is the backbone that has become the World
Wide Web. But
at that time we were on a dummy terminal connected to a mainframe and it was
that old clunky,
think 1970’s technology, and you’d kinda type a
01:03:00message with this very, you had to know this
address, and you could send a note. It was all like pixel, to create a triangle,
there was no graphic
that was a triangle, you had to like put a bunch of lines across and then the
next line down shrink
it by a few and shrink it by a few to create a visual that would look like a
pink triangle. And then
maybe put a phrase below it that would somehow convey to people what your belief
was. So
what we now think of as signature blocks. And the university those all got put
off into memory
somewhere and when the mainframes went away and it all got migrated into the web
these, Tech,
with its emphasis on being a digital campus and archiving and creating, storing
these histories
hung on to a lot of that. So I was actually years ago was Googling and found
like these emails of
me and other people debating some of the topics around
01:04:00gay rights and visibility and things like
that. So it’s interesting, I don’t know, I’m sure it can still be found, but
it’s interesting to see,
what things that I would never have thought would get pulled up into the digital
world are now in
the digital world, so...pretty cool.
EVENSON: That is interesting. We’ll have to take another look. And thanks for
letting us know
about the Collegiate Times, I’m sure there’s...
BROBSON: Over the years they’ve covered a lot of different things and there’d
probably be
some interesting articles to pick out. I’m sure that they would’ve had an
article on the murder.
I’m embarrassed that I can’t remember the guys name. I know him, I can see him
across from
Gillie’s on College Avenue, but for the life of me I can’t pull the name out of
my head right now.
EVENSON: Well, we’ll take a look.
BROBSON: And I’m certainly available and accessible. There’s tons of other
stories, there’s lots
of other sub pieces of this, people that I would suggest, you know I talked
about, it’d be
interesting to collect oral histories of people who were not out. That might be interesting.
01:05:00And I
know people who I could refer you to on that front. There also were people like Sarah
Richardson who was the woman with me tried to, well we did successfully found
the faculty
caucus, which became a big deal. Brian McConnell, first president of the student
group that was
a fully sanctioned student group. And there’s people who have some really
important moments
of history in their heads. And going before me, I know you’ve got some people
from before me,
and hopefully I’m sure somebody is collecting some of the retired faculty’s memories.
EVENSON: Yeah, we do have some students doing that.
BROBSON: Luther Brice and Dean O’Donnell and other people, but the students from earlier
01:06:00periods are thin on the ground. I overlap with Tom-what’s his name, he’s
involved with the Ex
Lapide, not Tillus or Tiller it’s, shoot, anyway it’ll come to me. But Steve
Knowles, the
gentleman I mentioned, he was on campus in the late sixties, the early
seventies. He lives still
here in town. He might be an interesting person for someone of that period that
really, really
predates things, the Vietnam War era.
EVENSON: Well we will let Dr. Cline know.
BROBSON: Okay.
EVENSON: Thank you so much.
BROBSON: This was lots of fun. Obviously, I had lots of stories to tell.
EVENSON: That’s a good thing. It helps our project.
BROBSON: And again if there’s anything that doesn’t make sense or you’re
reviewing it and
need clarification
01:07:00just reach out to me.
EVENSON: Yeah, definitely. I have all of your contact information.
01:08:00