Shropshire Star

Here’s everything you need to know about why the 1967 Sexual Offences Act was so important

The Act fundamentally changed being gay for people in Britain, but there was still a long way to go before true equality was permitted by law.

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Members of the Campaign for Homosexual Equality march through Whitehall in London on their way to present to the Prime Minister a petition demanding that all discrimination against gay people be abolished.

It is officially 50 years since the 1967 Sexual Offences Act was passed, and people across the UK have been celebrating the bill’s groundbreaking impact on British society.

The Act is famous for decriminalising homosexuality: the first time being gay in Britain was not, in itself, a crime.

Here’s everything you need to know about what the changes meant for British society.

What were the rules beforehand?

A banner carrying homosexual Tony Whitehead (centre) and his friend John Roman Baker (white scarf) during a protest by supporters of the Campaign for Homosexual Equality at a British Home Stores in London's Oxford Street, over the forced resignation of Mr Whitehead after being shown on TV kissing and cuddling Mr Baker.
Gay rights protesters in February 1976 (PA/PA Archive)

The social stigma that came of being gay prompted some to volunteer for or be made to do traumatic aversion therapies: designed to “cure” a person of their homosexuality through a series of painful or uncomfortable routines.

Men were not allowed to share beds, have sex with one another, commit “gross indecency” – that is, any other sexual act beyond sex, including touching and kissing – or promote homosexual behaviour.

The law specifically forbade the act of homosexual sex between two men – termed “buggery” – but gay women were still subjected to prejudice and socially stigmatised.

What did the 1967 law do?

 A gay demonstration near the Old Bailey to mark the start of the prosecution alleging blasphemous libel brought by anti-porn campaigner Mary Whitehouse against the homosexual newspaper Gay News and its editor Denis Lemon.
Gay pride marchers in July 1977 (PA/PA Archive)

The change to the law meant it was no longer a criminal offence for two consenting adult men to have sex, provided they were over the age of 21 and did not commit the act in a public lavatory.

It still remained a criminal offence to have homosexual sex if more than two people were present, and the charge of gross indecency could still be enforced under the understanding that certain behaviours remained “unnatural offences”.

Convictions for gross indecency continued to be enforced after 1967, sometimes for merely setting up two people on a date.

What happened afterwards

Public outcry and continuing prejudice meant that anti-homosexual legislation continued to be doggedly enforced for many years after the Act was passed.

Twenty-one years later, Margaret Thatcher’s government passed Section 28 of the Local Government Act 1988, which banned the promotion of homosexuality in schools or via publications from local authorities.

It took until 1994 for the age of consent between two men to be lowered to 18, and until 2000 for it to be lowered to 16 – when all gay people finally received parity with heterosexuals.

Attitudes have proved much harder to overcome. Research by the British Social Attitudes Survey showed that as recently as 2012, half the British public still did not approve of same-sex relationships.

How have people been celebrating the anniversary?

File photo dated 25/06/16 of a rainbow flag held aloft during the Pride in London parade. Theresa May acknowledged that people may be sceptical about the Tory record on gay rights, but insisted that both she and the party had "come a long way" on the issue.
The 2016 gay pride festival in London (Daniel Leal-Olivas/PA)

People have been celebrating on Twitter, using the hashtag #50yearslegal.

Rainbow cakes made tasty breakfasts

Employees at the publisher Little, Brown Book Group celebrated with a beautiful selection of rainbow-coloured foods.

Gladstone, the Treasury cat wore his special bow tie

Here’s to greater equality for all.

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