In my last post, I discussed the challenges of writing a history that ends so close to the present day. However, there was also a clear benefit to writing a recent history: I had a rich set of sources for my research. Most of Family Matters is centered in the 1990s, when individuals and companies were increasingly using email – and still printing out the messages! As a result, I had the great fortune of being able to review hard copies of typewritten documents. (I’ll admit, I squealed every time I saw the AOL logo at the top of an email.) Moreover, I was able to fill in gaps with oral history interviews. In this post, I’ll cover how I went about collecting oral histories.
The first step in collecting oral histories is always identifying people to interview. (That was usually the simplest task in the process, thanks to the spreadsheets I discussed in my second post.) The second step is tracking the individuals down. I did name searches in google, which often produce email address or phone numbers on their institutional websites or their social media pages. If that didn’t work, I could often find groups with which they were or had been associated. I contacted those organizations, by phone, email, or snail mail, asking if they would be willing to pass a message to the individual, along with my contact information.
I also asked them if they could put me in contact with those people. That could be extremely helpful, for two reasons. First, some people felt more comfortable speaking with me after they had heard from people they trusted. One of the major players in the debates over gay and lesbian rights in the 1980s and 1990s was psychologist Paul Cameron, who produced a series of studies claiming homosexuals were more likely to molest children then heterosexuals. His anti-homosexual bias was so virulent and obvious that the American Psychological Association ultimately expelled him for ethics violations. I wanted to speak with him about what led him to his research and how he designed his studies, but he did not respond to my initial messages. However, after I interviewed another conservative researcher, who sent Cameron an email vouching for my professionalism, he agreed to speak with me.
The other way that my interviewees opened doors was by contacting individuals I could not track down myself. I’ll never forget the day my phone rang from an unknown New Hampshire number. I had been researching New Hampshire’s 1987 law banning gay and lesbian foster parents. One of my interviewees, who had advocated against the statute, recommended I speak with Donna Sytek, who was then a leading New Hampshire Republican legislator. The person had said they would try to track her down, but after weeks went by, I lost faith that would happen. My efforts to find her email, phone number, or address had failed. I had accepted it wasn’t meant to be when the phone call came through. I picked up, the person on the other line said something along the lines of: “This is Donna Sytek. I heard you wanted to speak to me?” I was flustered, thrilled, and confused. I asked her how she had found out I was searching for her. She told me that someone I had interviewed had talked to another person, who spoke to someone else, who ran into Sytek at the grocery store. Everyone had told me New Hampshire was a small state. No kidding!
Given the turmoil that surrounded the policy—and the fact that the state governor publicly reprimanded her for her actions—I had trouble believing her statement. At the same time, I completely understood her reluctance to talk about the events, especially since she was serving as the Secretary of Children and Families in Wisconsin at the time I contacted her.
Anderson was just one of the dozens of people who declined or did not respond to my requests for an interview. But just as many people—if not more—said yes. In my next post, I’ll address how I went about using the oral histories I collected. All of them helped make Family Matters a more complete and richer account of the struggle for queer rights.