Transcript
Toggle Index/Transcript View Switch.
Index
Search this Index
X
00:00:00 - Introduction to Interview / Childhood

Play segment

Partial Transcript: 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?

Segment Synopsis: Brobson discusses growing up in Alexandria, Virginia, graduating from Virginia Tech, and working on Capitol Hill and at Virginia Tech.

Keywords: Alexandria; childhood

00:02:14 - Self-identification

Play segment

Partial Transcript: 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.

Segment Synopsis: Brobson describes the communities he identifies with.

Keywords: LGBT community; Virginia Tech; self-identification

00:05:20 - Coming out / Being a Student at Virginia Tech

Play segment

Partial Transcript: BROBSON: 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.

Segment Synopsis: Brobson discusses coming out while relatively young and finding a gay community in Virginia and at Virginia Tech.

Keywords: LGBT community; Virginia Tech; coming out; student life

00:08:02 - Denim Day

Play segment

Partial Transcript: There 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.

Segment Synopsis: Brobson discusses attempts to support the gay community through Denim Day and forming a LGBT student group.

Keywords: Denim Day; LGBT community; student life

00:13:23 - Speaking in Tech classes about being gay

Play segment

Partial Transcript: 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 constructive 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.

Segment Synopsis: Brobson discusses his experiences talking in front of sociology/psychology classes about being gay.

Keywords: LGBT advocacy; student life

00:17:25 - Social life in Blacksburg / Violence against the gay community

Play segment

Partial Transcript: 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 the 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.

Segment Synopsis: Brobson talks about social life in Blacksburg and events when he was threatened, including the murder of a gay man in 1982.

Keywords: Blacksburg; LGBT community; murder; social life

00:25:14 - Gay Student Alliance Meetings

Play segment

Partial Transcript: 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.

00:25:48 - Working for Gay Rights at Virginia Tech

Play segment

Partial Transcript: BROBSON: So, if we fast forward, then, to 1989 when I came back to work on campus. We had a new President, Dr. McComas, who 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 a University sanctioned student organization.

Segment Synopsis: Brobson discusses returning to Virginia Tech as an employee, adding sexual orientation to university's EEO statement, forming the LGBT Caucus, acquiring support for Lambda Horizons, hosting the first National Coming Out Day on campus, and generally building support for the LGBT community on campus.

Keywords: LGBT Caucus; Lambda Horizons; principles of community

00:35:15 - Challenges and setbacks for Brobson, LGBT rights, and diversity at Tech

Play segment

Partial Transcript: BROBSON: 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 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 of 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.

Segment Synopsis: Brobson discusses the risk-adverse nature of the university administration and incidents he's had at work about being a gay male in a fundraising position.

Keywords: LGBT at Virginia Tech; workplace

00:43:59 - Positive changes in student attitudes and push back

Play segment

Partial Transcript: BROBSON: So I had started talking to classes, as I say back in, let’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 shifted 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.

Segment Synopsis: Brobson talks about changes in the students' attitudes towards the LGBT community in the mid-1990s and push back from the Board of Visitors against gay rights in the early 2000s.

00:49:42 - Being an activist

Play segment

Partial Transcript: 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, right? 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.

Segment Synopsis: Brobson discusses why he's an activist.

Keywords: activism

00:52:47 - Marriage and the legalization of gay marriage in California and Virginia

Play segment

Partial Transcript: BROBSON: A you know the State of Virginia passed a constitutional amendment prohibiting 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 were, 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.

Segment Synopsis: Brobson discusses having to marry his husband twice, legalizing gay marriage in Virginia, and other people who could be a resource to young people.

Keywords: gay marriage; marriage

00:58:05 - Continuing challenges and activism / Conclusion

Play segment

Partial Transcript: EVENSON: 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.

Segment Synopsis: Brobson discusses general feelings about ongoing challenges and changes and briefly his work for JDRF, technology, and other people to contact.

Keywords: activism; challenges