var editData = {"errorMessage":"","dataLines":"Wanderground\tCranston, RI\twanderground.org \tWanderground Lesbian Archive\/Library provides vibrant community gathering spaces to collect, preserve, and bring to life Lesbian activisms, artistic cultural expressions, and forgotten legacies. Wanderground seeks to revitalize our herstories as footing to create bridges for generations of Lesbian futures. Wanderground offers a grounding place to wander and browse...to discover, learn, and affirm Lesbian identities. Focused on serving the New England region\t2022\t\t\tOSM\t41.780959\t-71.437126\nMichigan State University \tEast Lansing, Michigan\thttps:\/\/www.purple4womyn.org\/lesbian-legacies\/lesbian-legacies-in-msu-special-collections\/\tLesbian Legacies works in cooperation with the Michigan State University Libraries Special Collections to maintain, expand, and make accessible invaluable materials from a vibrant and still extant current in lesbian herstory. \t2019\t\t\tOSM\t42.732031\t-84.472168\nLesbian Herstory Archives\tBrooklyn, NY\thttps:\/\/lesbianherstoryarchives.org\/\tThe Lesbian Herstory Archives exists to gather and preserve records of Lesbian lives and activities. This ensures future generations will have ready access to materials relevant to their lives.\t1974\t718-768-3953\tlesbianherstoryarchives@gmail.com\tOSM\t40.652601\t-73.949721\nThe Lesbian Archive @ The Glasgow Women's Library\tGlasgow, Scotland\thttps:\/\/womenslibrary.org.uk\/explore-the-library-and-archive\/the-archive-collection\/the-lesbian-archive\/\tIn the early years the archive collection mainly comprised of lesbian books including literature, pulp fiction and a significant amount of lesbian and gay as well as feminist non-fiction. It received donations of duplicates from other Feminist Libraries and Archives in the UK, such as the Bath Feminist Archive (which is now incorporated into the collection of Feminist Archives South). It also took donations of journals and pamphlets, oral histories, foreign language materials, organisational records, press clippings and manuscripts from individual women, and by the late 1980s had amassed and impressive and unique collection of lesbian women\u2019s materials. The collection ranges from organisational records and personal archives to journals and ephemera.\t1984\t0141 550 2267\tinfo@womenslibrary.org.uk\tOSM\t55.860618\t-4.249793\nBay Area Lesbians Archives\tOakland, CA \thttps:\/\/www.bayarealesbianarchives.org\/\tOur collections emphasize the lives and activism of courageous everyday lesbians who found ways to live open and authentic lives. These brave pioneers envisioned and created a counterculture, the magnitude of which is unprecedented in women\u2019s history. These stories are a vital addition to the histories of freedom and social justice movements worldwide.\t2014\t415-789-8537\tbalezarchives@gmail.com\tOSM\t37.804456\t-122.271356\nThe Sophia Smith Collection of Women\u2019s History\tNorthhampton, MA\thttps:\/\/libraries.smith.edu\/special-collections\/about\/sophia-smith-collection-womens-history\tHas a significant amount of materials related to and created by lesbians. Lesbian self- documentation is one of the long-standing collection development areas. There are also collections related to lesbians in the College Archives and Mortimer Rare Book Collection at Smith, but the SSC has substantial collection breadth and depth. Soon the website will be updated with a really great subject analysis, which will make the discovery of lesbian content even easier. Also at Duke is the Sallie Bingham Center for Women's History and Culture, which has a significant amount of lesbian archival materials. \t1942\t\t\tOSM\t42.326180\t-72.636717\nJune L. Mazer Lesbian Archives\tWest Hollywood, CA\thttps:\/\/www.mazerlesbianarchives.org\/\tWe are a vital Lesbian and feminist community resource committed to sharing our history across generations, ethnicity, race, and personal belief systems by collecting, preserving and making available unique memorabilia in a safe and welcoming environment.\t1981\t310-659-2478\tcontact@mazerlesbianarchives.org\tOSM\t34.092301\t-118.369289\nOhio Lesbian Archives\tCincinnati, Ohio\thttps:\/\/ohiolesbianarchives.wordpress.com\/\tAlthough the majority of our archival collections document the greater Cincinnati region, we also have materials from far beyond Ohio \u2013 throughout the Midwest, the United States, and even some international materials. Our founding mission was to document Lesbian herstory, but we aim to be a history resource to all LGBTQ+ communities, and we have materials spanning that diverse spectrum. Our archival collections include documents, ephemera, books, music, photographs, objects, video and much more. \t1989\t513-256-7695\tolarchives@gmail.com\tOSM\t39.101454\t-84.512460\nOzarks Lesbian and Gay Archives at Missouri State Univ\tSpringfield, Missouri\thttps:\/\/libraries.missouristate.edu\/OLGA.htm\tOLGA\u2019s mission is to document the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) experience in the Ozarks region. The Archives is comprised of a number of individual collections.\t2003\t\t\tOSM\t37.196830\t-93.294658\nSan Francisco's GLBT Historical Society\tSan Francisco, CA\thttps:\/\/www.glbthistory.org\/\tThe GLBT Historical Society collects, preserves, exhibits and makes accessible to the public materials and knowledge to support and promote understanding of LGBTQ history, culture and arts in all their diversity. The Lesbian Archives of Sonoma County also donated their interview videos (and miscellaneous ephemera) to this archive. \t1985\t(415) 777-5455\t\tOSM\t37.709526\t-122.469344\nPotencia Tortillera\tBuenos Aires Province, Argentina\thttp:\/\/potenciatortillera.blogspot.com\/\tDigitized documentary archive of lesbian activism, made up of graphic and theoretical productions, photographic and sound records, reflective encounters, and street actions of lesbian groups and activists from different historical moments, multiple political positions, and diverse geographies in Argentina\t\t\tmemorialesbica2@gmail.com\tOSM\t-42.916506\t-71.336388\nDuke University, Atlanta Lesbian Feminist Alliance\tDurham, NC\thttps:\/\/archives.lib.duke.edu\/catalog\/alfa\t24 linear feet of lesbian feminist archives were donated to Duke University when the original archive closed down, and you can go see them. When ALFA disbanded in 1994, the archival collections and the bulk of the periodicals collection were transferred to Duke's David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library. The book collection and the remaining periodicals stayed in Atlanta, with books relating to feminist theory going to Emory University and the rest to a community library. The ALFA Archives and Periodicals Collections that have been transferred to Duke are an incredibly rich source of information about feminist and lesbian activism and communities, especially in the Southeast, from the early 1970s to the present.\t1994\t\t\tOSM\t35.996653\t-78.901805\nFeminist and Lesbian Periodical Collection at University of Oregon\tEugene, OR\thttps:\/\/archiveswest.orbiscascade.org\/ark:\/80444\/xv94741\/op=fstyle.aspx?t=a&q=\t43 linear square feet of lesbian and feminist titles, mainly periodicals. The collection is open to the public. The Feminist and Lesbian Periodical Collection contains 482 lesbian and feminist periodical titles including 36 Oregon titles and 31 international titles. Approximately 80 percent of the entire collection contains titles published during the 1970s. This collection does not duplicate circulating holdings in the UO Libraries for feminist and lesbian topics. The majority of periodicals in this collection were collected and donated by Ruth and Jean Mountaingrove of Wolf Creek, Oregon. During the late 1970s and 1980s, they lived on their rustic women's land where lesbians pursued writing, publishing, and other arts.\t\t\t\tOSM\t44.050505\t-123.095051\nArchives Lesbiennes du Qu\u00e9bec\tMontreal, Quebec\thttps:\/\/www.archiveslesbiennesduquebec.ca\/\tThe Lesbian Archives of Quebec (ALQ) works to find, preserve and bring to life the traces of Quebec lesbians.\t\t(514) 370-3616\t\tOSM\t45.503182\t-73.569806\nArchives Lesbiennes\tParis, France\thttp:\/\/www.arcl.fr\/\tCreated in 1983,this documentation center for lesbian cultures bears witness to lesbian, feminist and homosexual movements and groups. It is constantly enriched thanks to subscriptions and exchanges, purchases of books, donations of old and recent documents.\t1983\t\tarchives.lesbiennes@gmail.com\tOSM\t48.858890\t2.320041\nVictorian Women\u2019s Liberation and Lesbian Feminist Archives \tBrunswick East Melbourne, Victoria\thttp:\/\/www.vwllfa.org.au\/\tTo collect any and all of the material relating to feminist issues, lesbian and womyn-only collectives, actions, groups, conferences, meetings, demonstrations, marches and gatherings that came under the umbrella of the Women\u2019s Liberation Movement in Victoria from 1969 onwards.\t1983\t03 9387 6610\tvwllfa@gmail.com\tOSM\t-37.768880\t144.977682\nAustralian Queer Archives\tMelbourne, Australia\thttps:\/\/queerarchives.org.au\/\tThe Australian Queer Archives (AQuA) collects, preserves and celebrates material from the lives and experiences of lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and gender diverse, intersex, queer, Brotherboy and Sistergirl (LGBTIQ+) Australians.\t1978\t\toffice@queerarchives.org.au\tOSM\t-37.814218\t144.963161\nChris Gonzalez Collection at Indianapolis Public Library\tIndianapolis, IN\thttps:\/\/www.indypl.org\/books-movies-music\/special-collections\/chris-gonzalez-collection\tIn existence for over 25 years, the Chris Gonzalez Library and Archives served as a place where LGBTQ+ people could access materials specific to their community. Curated by Michael Bohr, the library was comprised of over 7,000 titles, mostly from donations from community members. In 2017, Indy Pride entered into a partnership with The Indianapolis Public Library to receive most of the book and video materials, curate. The now-named Chris Gonzalez Collection is housed at Central Library, with extra copies of items floating throughout the system.\t2017\t\t\tOSM\t39.768333\t-86.158350\nGerber\/Hart Library & Archives\tChicago, IL\thttps:\/\/www.gerberhart.org\/\tGerber\/Hart\u2019s collections focus on the culture and history of LGBTQ peoples and additional marginalized sexual and gender minorities in Chicago and the Midwest. Open to all, Gerber\/Hart serves these communities by collecting, preserving, and making accessible collection items of individuals, organizations, and businesses, as well as publicly distributed items. Additionally, Gerber\/Hart provides programming and exhibitions related to items in its collections and on other topics in LGBTQ history and culture.\t1981\t773.381.8030\tinfo@gerberhart.org\tOSM\t41.875562\t-87.624421\nThe History Project\tBoston, MA\thttps:\/\/www.historyproject.org\/\tThe History Project is focused exclusively on documenting and preserving the history of New England\u2019s LGBTQ communities and sharing that history with LGBTQ individuals, organizations, allies, and the public.\t1980\t\tinfo@historyproject.org\tOSM\t42.355433\t-71.060511\nIHLIA LGBT Heritage\tAmsterdam\thttp:\/\/www.ihlia.nl\/\tEveryone can visit IHLIA for Information about gay men, lesbians, bisexuals and transgenders, their history, environment and culture.\t1999\t31 20 523 0837\tinfo@ihlia.nl\tOSM\t52.373080\t4.892453\nJean-Nickolaus Tretter Collection\tMinneapolis, MN\thttps:\/\/www.lib.umn.edu\/collections\/special\/tretter\tThe Jean-Nickolaus Tretter Collection in Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Studies is the largest LGBTQ-specific archival repository in the upper Midwest. The Tretter Collection holds approximately 3,500 linear feet of material\u2014includingbooks, periodicals, gay literature, personal and organizational records, zines and pamphlets, artifacts and ephemera, and audiovisual materials. The collection is national and international in scope (featuring materials in approximately 58 languages), but is especially strong in materials documenting the history of LGBTQ people, organizations, and communities in the Upper Midwest, especially the Twin Cities area.\tDonated to UM in 2000\t612-624-7526\ttretter@umn.edu\tOSM\t44.981720\t-93.463223\nLambda Archives of San Diego\tSan Diego, CA\thttps:\/\/www.lambdaarchives.org\/\tThe mission of the Lambda Archives of San Diego is to collect, preserve, and share the history of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer people in San Diego, Northern Baja California and the Imperial County region.\t1987\t619-260-1522\tinfo@lambdaarchives.org\tOSM\t32.717420\t-117.162773\nLeslie-Lohmann Museum of Gay & Lesbian Art\tNew York, NY\thttps:\/\/www.leslielohman.org\/\tThe Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art provides a platform for artistic exploration through multi-faceted queer perspectives. We embrace the power of the arts to inspire, explore, and foster understanding of the rich diversity of LGBTQIA+ experiences.\t1969\t1 212-431-2609\tinfo@leslielohman.org\tOSM\t40.712728\t-74.006015\nLGBTQ St. Louis History at Washington University\tSt. Louis, MO\thttps:\/\/libguides.wustl.edu\/LGBT-archive\tCollects the history and culture of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and trans*, and queer (LGBTQ) communities in the larger St. Louis region.\t\t\t\tOSM\t38.628028\t-90.191015\nNorthwest Lesbian and Gay History Project\tSeattle, WA\thttp:\/\/www.lgbthistorynw.org\/\tThe Northwest Lesbian and Gay History Museum Project (NWGLHMP, or The History Project), founded in 1994, is an organization which researches, interprets and communicates the history of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people in the Pacific Northwest for the purposes of study, education and enjoyment. Recognizing that the history of this vibrant community has been sparsely and inaccurately recorded, the History Project seeks to: collect oral histories; locate photographs, ephemera, objects and documents; and work with archives to insure the preservation of these materials; and create public programs such as exhibits, publications and presentations to communicate the collective experience we have uncovered. When the History Project was founded in 1994, several of the organizers were pursuing degrees in the Museum Studies field. As time went by, those members moved on to jobs in actual museums around the country. The remaining volunteers focused on oral history collecting, linking people having LGBT memorabilia with interested repositories, and tracing the geographical distribution of LGBT-related venues and living spaces. That work is ongoing today.\t1994\t\tinfo@lgbthistorynw.org\tOSM\t47.603832\t-122.330062\nONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives at the USC Libraries\tLos Angeles, CA\thttps:\/\/one.usc.edu\/\tThe largest repository of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer (LGBTQ) materials in the world. ONE Archives currently houses over two million archival items including periodicals, books, film, video and audio recordings, photographs, artworks, organizational records, and personal papers. ONE Archives has been a part of the University of Southern California Libraries since 2010. It is the mission of ONE Archives at the USC Libraries to collect, preserve, and make accessible LGBTQ historical materials while promoting new scholarship on and public awareness of queer histories.\t1952\t\taskone@usc.ed\tOSM\t34.053691\t-118.242766\nLesbenarchiv Frankfurt (Lesbian Archives of Frankfurt)\tFrankfurt, Germany\thttp:\/\/www.lesbenarchiv-frankfurt.de\/\tIt happened in 1989 that about 40 Frankfurt lesbians decided to take the path of so-called established politics and founded an association to emphasize their demand for municipal financial recognition and support. Among them the founders of the lesbian archive. In the summer of 1990, after what was a short period of six months for urban bureaucratic conditions, the lesbian archive received money from the Office for Science and Art of the City of Frankfurt for the first time in order to set itself up. With the opening of the lesbian-gay cultural center in Klingerstra\u00dfe in 1991, the lesbian archive now also has a permanent place in space.\t1991\t49 69 293045\tLesbenarchiv.frankfurt@t-online.de\tOSM\t50.110644\t8.682092\nSpinnboden\tBerlin, Germany\thttps:\/\/spinnboden.de\/\tOur archive dates back to 1973. It started with a collection of minutes and newspaper clippings. In 2023 we are therefore celebrating the 50th anniversary of the lesbian archive.\t1983\t49 (0)30 448 58 48\tspinnboden@spinnboden.de\tOSM\t52.492796\t13.398472\nPride Library \tOntario, Canada\thttp:\/\/www.uwo.ca\/pridelib\/\tOur mandate is to acquire and provide public access to materials by and about the lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and queer community (LGBTQ). Located in the D.B. Weldon Library at the University of Western Ontario, London ON, Canada. The Pride Library welcomes all.\t1997\t(519) 661-2111 x85828\tjmiller@uwo.ca\tOSM\t50.000678\t-86.000977\nQuatrefoil Library\tMinneapolis, Minnesota\thttps:\/\/www.qlibrary.org\/\tQuatrefoil Library is a community center that cultivates the free exchange of ideas and makes accessible LGBTQ+ materials for education and inspiration.\t1986\t612-729-2543\t\tOSM\t45.023911\t-93.089688\nJames C. Hormel LGBTQIA Center\tSan Francisco, CA\thttps:\/\/sfpl.org\/locations\/main-library\/james-c-hormel-lgbtqia-center-3rd-floor\/hormel-center-collections\/lgbtqia\tThe James C. Hormel LGBTQIA Center includes extensive archives of historical materials relating to LGBTQIA lives and culture, with an emphasis on the San Francisco Bay Area and Northern California. Visitors can find personal papers and organizational records, magazines and newspapers, zines, audiovisual materials, photographs, pulp paperbacks, and objects. To use the archives, please visit the San Francisco History Center Reading Room on the 6th floor of the Main Library. No appointment is needed, but some materials require advance notice for retrieval. Because of the unique and often fragile nature of these materials, archives are available for use exclusively in the San Francisco History Center reading room.\t\t415-557-4567\t\tOSM\t37.779026\t-122.419906\nSchwules Museum\tBerlin, Germany\thttps:\/\/www.schwulesmuseum.de\/\tThe Schwules Museum is dedicated to the diversity of gay, lesbian, bisexual and trans-identified styles of life in history, culture and art. The museum collects, stores and presents documents and witness accounts from the many decades of queer life.\t1985\t49 (0)30 69 59 90 50\tkontakt@schwulesmuseum.de\tOSM\t52.532077\t13.428685\nStonewall Museum \tFort Lauderdale, FL\thttps:\/\/stonewall-museum.org\/\tThe Stonewall National Museum and Archives (SNMA) is one of the largest gay archives and libraries in the United States, now almost 50 years old. However, we have no direct link to the Stonewall Riots in New York in 1969. When we were founded in 1972, the founder Mark Silber used the name \u201cStonewall\u201d to recognize the fight for LGBTQ liberation that began at the Stonewall Inn in 1969. It was a name with meaning then and it has become nearly synonymous with gay liberation efforts since that time.\t1972\t\t\tOSM\t26.122308\t-80.143379\nLGBT Collection at Yale Archives\tNew Haven, CT\thttps:\/\/archives.yale.edu\/repositories\/12\/resources\/4019\tThis intentionally assembled collection documents lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people, organizations, and events in New Haven and Connecticut. The collection consists of newsletters, flyers, posters, and other printed material.\t2006\t(203) 432-1735\tbeinecke.library@yale.edu\tOSM\t41.308214\t-72.925052\n","config":"{\"dataType\":null,\"address\":\"-1\",\"city\":1,\"state\":\"-1\",\"zip\":\"-1\",\"country\":\"-1\",\"lat\":8,\"lng\":9,\"title\":0,\"web\":2,\"image\":\"-1\",\"email\":\"-1\",\"group\":\"-1\",\"mapType\":null,\"pinLabel\":\"-1\",\"pinLabelName\":\"none\",\"markerLabelZoomIn\":null,\"markerLabelZoomInName\":null,\"addressPrettyName\":\"none\",\"cityPrettyName\":\"Location\",\"statePrettyName\":\"none\",\"zipPrettyName\":\"none\",\"countryPrettyName\":\"none\",\"latPrettyName\":\"none\",\"lngPrettyName\":\"none\",\"titlePrettyName\":\"Name\",\"webPrettyName\":\"Website\",\"imagePrettyName\":\"none\",\"emailPrettyName\":\"none\",\"groupPrettyName\":\"none\",\"hideLatLong\":true,\"markerTitle\":false,\"mouseOverColumn\":0,\"mouseOverColumnName\":\"Name\",\"regionCode\":\"\",\"regionCountry\":\"Auto-Detect\",\"showLabels\":true,\"moveSingleMarker\":true,\"emm_lat\":8,\"emm_lng\":9,\"emm_acc\":7,\"center_lat\":-1000,\"center_lng\":-1000,\"zoom\":-1,\"customZoomAndCenter\":false,\"selectedMapType\":\"Street\",\"displayDataOnPage\":false,\"clustering\":false,\"clusterValue\":null,\"clusterColumn\":null,\"clusterColumnName\":null,\"clusterColumnType\":null,\"clusteringRangeEnabled\":false,\"clusteringRangeVals\":[],\"clusterRowIdCount\":0,\"clusterZoomLevel\":11,\"heatMapEnabled\":false,\"heatMapOpacity\":null,\"heatMapRadius\":null,\"heatMapAndPins\":false,\"enableStreetView\":null,\"savedMultiSelectFilterValues\":{},\"savedSelectedFilterValues\":{},\"savedGroupsOff\":{},\"showMoreOptions\":false,\"disAbleDynamicFilters\":false,\"exportData\":false,\"scrollWheel\":true,\"zoomInSearching\":true,\"zoomInLevel\":null,\"mapLanguage\":\"en\",\"showMarkerNumbers\":false,\"markerNumberColumn\":null,\"markerNumberColumnName\":null,\"excludeFromCluster\":false,\"excludeFromClusterColumn\":null,\"excludeFromClusterColumnName\":null,\"excludeFromClusterValues\":null,\"multiSelectFilters\":false,\"SavePresetFilters\":false,\"showDirectionDescription\":false,\"useGoogleMapsDirections\":false,\"columnHeaderArray\":[\"Name\",\"Location\",\"Website\",\"Description\",\"Founded\",\"Phone\",\"Email\",\"emm_acc\",\"emm_lat\",\"emm_lng\"],\"headerDisplayOrderIdxs\":[0,1,2,3,4,5,6],\"noDisplayNames\":[],\"groupHash\":{},\"sortedGroupKeys\":[],\"groupImageHash\":{},\"groupCustomColorImageHash\":{},\"ImageDimensions\":{},\"StreetView\":false,\"columnTypes\":[\"string\",\"string\",\"string\",\"string\",\"string\",\"string\",\"string\"],\"maxNumber\":{\"4\":2022,\"5\":0,\"6\":55.860618,\"7\":0},\"CircleWithRadius\":false,\"CircleRadiusColumn\":null,\"CircleRadiusColumnName\":null,\"DefaultCircleRadius\":10,\"CircleWithRadiusUnits\":\"miles\",\"circleFillOpacity\":0.35,\"exludeCustomRadiusFromCluster\":false,\"filterListNames\":[],\"filterListArray\":[],\"filterListSortedKeyHash\":{},\"filterColumnIdxs\":[],\"filterCounts\":false,\"markerImageIdx\":[],\"useCustomImages\":false,\"CustomImages\":[],\"customImageSizes\":{},\"singleCustomImage\":null,\"singleCustomImageHeight\":null,\"singleCustomImageWidth\":null,\"customSearchText\":\"\",\"clusterColor\":\"red\",\"clusterHexColor\":\"FF776B\",\"selectedDefaultMarker\":\"purple\",\"selectedDefaultMarkerHexColor\":\"C89BFF\",\"disableSearching\":false,\"noSearchColumns\":[],\"mobileSearchEnabled\":false,\"centerLocationOnMap\":false,\"showSearchLocationImage\":false,\"hideLogo\":false,\"hasCustomLogo\":false,\"logoText\":\"Map made with EasyMapMaker.com\",\"logoUrl\":\"https:\/\/www.easymapmaker.com\",\"defaultLogo\":\"\/\/cdn.easymapmaker.com\/img\/small_logo2.png\",\"defaultLogoShort\":\"\/img\/small_logo2.png\",\"defaultLogoText\":\"Map made with EasyMapMaker.com\",\"defaultLogoUrl\":\"https:\/\/www.easymapmaker.com\",\"hidePoi\":false,\"mapStyle\":\"default\",\"customMapStyleValue\":null,\"minNumber\":{\"4\":100,\"5\":-122.271356,\"6\":34.092301,\"7\":-122.271356}}","userSettings":{"title":"Find Lesbian Archives","description":"Read, watch and hear the history of the lesbians who came before us, their lives, their love, their tribulations and their art. 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