LGBTQ Explorers and Adventurers
There are a number of notable LGBTQ explorers and adventurers who have made significant contributions to history. These contributions consist of world records, historical writings and photographs of their travels and profession, and activism in the fields of anthropology and civil rights.
Exploration demands a certain character. It involves immense risk-taking accompanied by a unique sense of accomplishment and the personal exhilaration resulting from new experiences. Indeed, each of the individuals below detailed their personal experiences in autobiographies that were avidly consumed by the general public, and often made into award-winning films and documentaries.
For example, do you know:
- the lesbian explorer who was the first woman to sail and ski across Antarctica? She was also a key activist who fought for the State of Minnesota's equal marriage laws.
- the gay explorer of Africa and the Middle East who was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire?
- the lesbian woman who disguised herself as a man in order to participate in the early exploration of Hudson's Bay and the Northwest Territories?
- the bisexual explorer who later became a noted anthropologist and author of 23 books? She received the Presidential Medal of Freedom posthumously in 1979.
Read on for these, and more, fascinating stories:
- Ann Bancroft, United States
- Amelia Earhart, United States
- Isobel Gunn, Canada
- Count Eigil Knuth, Denmark
- Margaret Mead, United States
- Sally Ride, United States
- Sir Wilfred Thesiger, Great Britain