Colonel William A. Phillips

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The Ramrod was a gay leather bar located at 394–395 West Street in New York City that earned unsought notoriety as the site of an infamous hate crime. The bar was shuttered and never reopened after an act of anti-gay gun violence in 1980. Ex-transit cop Ronald K. Crumpley fired a submachine gun at Ramrod bar patrons, killing two people and wounding three others during a shooting spree in Greenwich Village, then considered one of the epicenters of gay life in America.[1]

"West Street Massacre"

On November 19, 1980, Ronald K. Crumpley, a law enforcement officer with NYC Transit Authority, started shooting indiscriminately at gay men in the Greenwich Village neighborhood with two stolen handguns just before 11 pm. Crumpley first shot and wounded two men outside a delicatessen located on the corner of Washington and 10th Streets, but they survived by eluding him by hiding behind parked cars. The Ramrod was two blocks away, located between 10th and Christopher Streets, sharing the blockfront with another gay bar called "Sneakers."[2]

The New York Times headline for the story of the shooting was entitled "West Street Massacre."[2]

Armed with an Uzi submachinegun outfitted with a 40-round magazine, Crumpley fired into the line of people waiting to go into the Ramrod and shot through its window, hitting four people. Vernon Kroening, an organist at the nearby St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church, died immediately. Four others were wounded, including Ramrod doorman Jorg Wenz, who died later that day at St. Vincent's Hospital. Two Ramrod patrons standing outside the bar were wounded as was another patron on the inside. After shooting a man inside Sneakers, Crumpley moved on, shooting and wounding two more men at Greenwich and 10th Streets, where he was arrested."[2]

The day after the shooting, Crumpley said, "I’ll kill them all — the gays — they ruin everything."[2]

A 38-year-old African American, Crumpley had been dismissed from the Transit Authority for stealing credit cards. The homophobic married father of two claimed after the shooting that he was dismayed by the interest gay men he knew supposedly had in him.[3]

A minister's son, Crumpley justified his murders based on his religious beliefs, believing that gay men were instruments of the Devil and were "trying to steal my soul just by looking at me."[4] He was found not guilty by reason of insanity and put in a mental facility. In 2001, he had a competency hearing, claiming he was now sane, but displayed homophobia during the court proceedings.[3] Crumpley remained incarcerated in mental institutions, dying in April 2015 at the age of 73.[2]

Closure and legacy

The Ramrod shut its doors after the 1980 shooting.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Ramrod". NYC LBGT Historic Sites Project. Retrieved August 15, 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e Dunlap, David W. (June 16, 2016). "New York's Own Anti-Gay Massacre, Now Barely Remembered". The New York Times. Retrieved August 15, 2023.
  3. ^ a b Italiano, Laura (June 8, 2001). "'80 PSYCHO KILLER STILL MOCKS GAY VICTIMS". New York Post. Retrieved August 15, 2023.
  4. ^ Browning, Frank (June 13, 2016). "No Trump. You Are The Engine of Homo Hatred". The Huffington Post. Retrieved August 16, 2023.