EPISODE FOUR: LONGSTAFF V. INS
Richard Longstaff immigrated to the United States from England in 1965 and soon settled in Dallas as a small business owner in the predominantly queer neighborhood of Oak Lawn. But when he applied to become a naturalized US citizen in 1976, INS officials rejected him because he was gay. Longstaff appealed the INS decision, but could he convince a federal judge that the country’s immigration policies were discriminatory against queer immigrants?
KEY SOURCES
Episode 4: Longstaff v. INS
Full Interview with Marc Stein, November 16, 2022 (Audio with transcript)
Richard Longstaff Interviewed by Mike Anglin for the Dallas Way, December 8, 2017 (Transcript)
The Union Jack at HoustonLGBTHistory.org
Text of the McCarran-Walter Immigration Act of 1952
Judge Joe Estes’s 1982 Decision in Longstaff v. INS at Justia.com
Photograph of Bill Nelson and Richard Longstaff at the Portal to Texas History
Photograph of Terry Tebedo and Richard Longstaff at the UNT Digital Library, June 1983
“The Decent Thing To Do,” Dallas Times Herald, June 11, 1984 at the Portal to Texas History
David Taffet, “Cedar Springs: Evolution of a Gayborhood,” Dallas Voice, January 10, 2014