2024 Icons
- Ron Ansin
- Laphonza Butler
- Maki Carrousel
- Desmond Child
- Margaret Chung
- Christian Cooper
- River Gallo
- Robert Garcia
- Rob Halford
- Jeanne Hoff
- Susan Love
- George Michael
- Kevin Naff
- Fabian Nelson
- Yannick Nézet-Séguin
- Robyn Ochs
- Pat Parker
- Mark Pocan
- Herb Ritts
- Beth Robinson
- Richard Schneider
- Robt Martin Seda-Schreiber
- Jackie Shane
- Ari Shapiro
- Sam Smith
- William Dorsey Swann
- Peter Tatchell
- Diana Taurasi
- Colton Underwood
- Luther Vandross
- Joel Wachs
Jack Baker & Michael McConnell
2017 Icon
Marriage Equality Pioneers
b. Both 1942
“I am convinced that same-sex marriage will be legalized in the United States.” - Jack Baker
Jack Baker and Michael McConnell are pioneering marriage equality advocates. In 1970 they became the first same-sex couple in the United States to apply for a marriage license. Later, in Baker v. Nelson, they became the first to file a state lawsuit for marriage equality.
Baker and McConnell attended the University of Minnesota. In 1969 Baker and other campus activists founded Fight Repression of Erotic Expression (FREE). FREE was the second gay-student-run organization in the United States. It is credited with creating what would become Gay Pride.
FREE’s initiatives included reporting on gay rights in Minneapolis and surveying major Twin Cities companies in an effort to expose discrimination against homosexuals. They discovered that Honeywell “would not employ a known homosexual.” FREE pushed the university to adopt gay-friendly initiatives, which included banning campus recruitment by employers that discriminate. The prohibition motivated Honeywell to end discrimination based on sexual orientation.
In 1971, campaigning on a pro-gay platform, Baker became the first openly gay president of the Minnesota Students Association. He was also the first to be reelected president in the school’s then 121-year history.
Baker and McConnell became a couple. They believed Minnesota law did not specifically ban marriage between same-sex adults. They applied for a marriage license, and Baker, a law student, insisted that under the rule of law, “what’s not forbidden is permitted.” Their application was denied. After losing a district court battle, the couple took the suit to the Minnesota Supreme Court. The high court also ruled against them. With marriage disallowed, McConnell legally unsuccessful, laid the foundation for future marriage equality challenges.
In 1972 Baker led the Democratic Farmer Labor Party (DFL) Gay Rights Caucus at the party’s Minnesota State Convention. The DFL was the first significant U.S. political party to support marriage equality. In 2015 when Obergefell v. Hodges made same-sex marriage legal nationwide, McConnell told Minnesota Public Radio, “We were right. We had been right.”
In 2016 Baker and McConnell published a memoir, “The Wedding Heard ‘Round the World: America’s First Gay Marriage.” They donated their legal documents to the Jean-Nickolaus Tretter Collection in Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Studies at the University of Minnesota.