I'm sad to report that the legendary gay leatherman pioneer,
Larry Townsend, died in Los Angeles yesterday.
Jack Fristcher provided the obit below.
Vaya con dios, amigo.

“Larry
Townsend was the pseudonymous author of dozens of books including
Run
Little Leather Boy (1970)
and The
Leatherman’s Handbook (1972)
at pioneer erotic presses such as Greenleaf Classics and the Other Traveler
imprint of Olympia Press. Growing up as a teenager of Swiss-German extraction in
Los Angeles a
few houses from Noel Coward and Irene Dunne, he ate cookies with his neighbor
Laura Hope Crews who was Aunt Pittypat in Gone
with the Wind. He
attended the prestigious Peddie School, and was stationed as Staff
Sergeant in charge of NCOIC Operations of Air Intelligence Squadrons for nearly
five years with the US Air Force in Germany (1950-1954). Completing his
tour of duty, he entered into the 1950s underground of the LA leather scene
where he and Montgomery Clift shared a lover. With his degree in industrial
psychology from UCLA (1957), he worked in the private sector and as a probation
officer with the Forestry Service. He began his pioneering activism in the
politics of gay liberation in the early 1960s. In 1972, as president of the
‘Homophile Effort for Legal Protection’ which had been founded in 1969 to defend
gays during and after arrests, he led a group in founding the
H.E.L.P.
Newsletter, the
forebear of Drummer
(1975).
As a writer and photographer, he was an essential eyewitness of the drama and
salon around Drummer
in
which his novels were often excerpted. His signature “Leather Notebook” column
appeared in Drummer
for
twelve years beginning in 1980, and continued in Honcho to Spring 2008. His last novel,
TimeMasters, was published April
2008.” This new thumbnail biography, approved and updated by Larry Townsend, is
reprinted from the leather-heritage book Gay
San Francisco: Eyewitness Drummer which, published June 20, 2008,
also includes Larry’s “Eyewitness Introduction,” his last published writing.
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