Hidden love of Havelock men documented in early 20th-century photographs - Action News
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New Brunswick

Hidden love of Havelock men documented in early 20th-century photographs

From original Kodak prints to the floor-to-ceiling enlargement that's the knockout centrepiece of a new exhibit at the Beaverbrook Art Gallery in Fredericton, a series of portraits of Leonard Olive Keith and Joseph Austin (Cub) Coates conveys a tender connection.

Photos of Len and Cub in new art exhibit and book transcend time, say Fredericton authors

Amateur photographer Leonard Olive Keith, right, arranged for many self-portraits in the 1910s and 1920s with Joseph Austin (Cub) Coates. (Leonard Keith)

The photos are striking.

From well-preserved original Kodak prints to the floor-to-ceiling enlargement that's now the knockout centrepiece of a new exhibit at the Beaverbrook Art Gallery a series of portraits of Leonard Olive Keith and Joseph Austin (Cub) Coates conveya tender connection.

"I'd never pictured queer history existing in New Brunswick, so to see it in front of mewas really shocking," said Dusty Green, who first saw the photos in 2015 while working as an intern at the Provincial Archives of New Brunswick in Fredericton.

"This was more than just a boyhood camaraderie," said provincial archivist Meredith Batt. "They clearly cared for each otherand making these records was sort of like an act of defiance."

A black and white photo of two men, with one sitting on the other, and holding hands.
Leonard Keith (1891-1950) and Cub Coates (1899-1965), photographed using a Kodak camera purchased by the Keith family in 1905. Batt and Green say 'the boys' were sometimes photographed together with the help of friends or a camera timer. (Leonard Keith)

Batt and Green say the photos are not only rare but probably the earliest photographic records of a same-sex couple in the Maritimes, showing their affection to each other but not to their community, which would have punished them for it.

Now, a century later, this love is on display and about as public as possible. In addition to the exhibition that will run until the end of July, Batt and Green are launching their book this weekend.

Len and Cub, A Queer History, published by Goose Lane Editions, will be celebrated Saturday at theBeaverbrook Art Gallery with guest speakers Brenda Murphy, New Brunswick's lieutenant-governor, and John Leroux, the Fredericton gallery's manager of collections and exhibitions.

"This is a message that transcends time," Green said. "Every queer person knows what it's like to hide in plain sight in your community or not be allowed to express who you are or express your love for another person."

Len and Cub at the door of a tarpaper shack near Havelock. (Leonard Keith)

Hostile environment

In 1892, Canada enacted gross indecency laws that made any acts of attraction between men, including kissing and touching, a criminal offence. The law was extended to women in 1953. In 1988, the gross indecency offencewas repealed.

The Len and Cub photos show two men expressing their intimate connection at a time when the lawmade that dangerous to do. They appear cradled around each other, sometimes holding hands, or one resting his head gently upon the other.

The two men were neighbours in Havelock, known then as Butternut Ridge, a small but thriving community about 50 kilometres west of Moncton.

Len and Cub: A hidden relationship captured in photos

3 years ago
Duration 6:03
Century-old portraits of a same sex couple tell a story that transcends time, say two New Brunswick queer historians.

According to the book, Len was an amateur photographer and carenthusiast who eventually owned alocal garage and pool hall.Cub, who was younger, was the son of a farmer. He eventually became a butcher, a contractorand a lover of horses. Both men were war veterans.

Their many private moments during the early 20th century were well documented by Len's camera.

Green and Battbelieve"the boys" took precautions to hide the true nature of their affections, partly by spending time outdoorsfishing and hunting.

"There are so many things that could have shielded them from speculation," Green said. "They're both young men, and it would not be uncommon for them to develop a close friendship and go off on camping trips together."

All the while, Len, who came from a wealthier family than Cub, was using his camera to capture the people and places that mattered to him.

"He cared about what he was photographing," Batt said. "It's very clear that he cared about Cub and about his community. He loved being outdoors and spending time in nature, going on adventures. He loved his car garage.

"It would have been very difficult for him to leave and give up those things."

Dusty Green, right, founded the Queer Heritage Initiative of New Brunswick in 2016 for the purpose of collecting and preserving archival records. (Mike Heenan/CBC News)

Kicked out of town

After the First World War, therelationship between Len and Cub changed, as did society.

"We saw this social conservatism bubbling up," Green said. "People would have been more rigid in their understanding and policing of the boundaries of sex and gender and would have been on higher alert for suspicious behaviour, like men in their twenties who are spending a lot time alone together."

Batt said Len and Cub's bond was "petering out," and Len was getting involved with other men.

Len also took up fox farming, which put him in competition with familiesalready making money off the lucrative fox pelt market.

An archivist's note attached to one of the Keith family photos identifies a manstanding outside a house in Havelock as being "partly responsible for having Leonard Keith kicked out of town for being homosexual."

In 1931, Len signed over control of his business and his finances to his sister Lucy and left for the United States. Green and Batt said they found no record that he ever came home until his burial in 1950.

Cub went on to marry and waswell known in harness racing circles before his death in 1965.

Meredith Batt and Dusty Green with the Keith family photo albums that were donated to the provincial archives by Havelock resident and local historian John Corey. (Mike Heenan/CBC News)

'We see ourselves in their situation'

Len and Cub's story might never have been toldif not forHavelock resident and local historian John Corey.

In 1984 he bought the Keith family's photo albums at an estate sale. He donated all of those striking black and white imagesto the provincial archives.

Green said the photos help affirm somethinghe'd never learned about in school.

"I didn't see myself represented in New Brunswick's history," Green, 31, said of his growing up. "And I took New Brunswick history courses as a kid.

"So I sort of had it in my head that queer history in New Brunswick from this time did not existor if it did,it had been destroyed."

A year after finding the photos, Green founded the Queer Heritage Initiative of New Brunswick, for the purpose of collecting and preserving archival records of LGBTQhistory in the province.

Batt, 26, joined in 2018 and now serves as president.

"If you read the dedication in the book, you see that it's for queer youth in New Brunswick and them finding their place," said Batt.

Batt and Green say they relate to Len and Cub, even though their lives are separated by a century.

"This is a concrete visual record of queer people living in a time and place where it would have been quite hostile or dangerous for them to do that," Green said. "And I think that still resonates with some queer people living in certain communities in New Brunswick today."