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Scott Smith at 575 Castro Street photographed by Harvey Milk, 1973. Smith was instrumental to Milk's career as an activist and politician. He organized and managed Milk's campaigns for public office from 1974 to 1977 and his influence was widely in evidence after Milk was elected to the San Francisco Board of Supervisors in 1977.
Milk met Scott Smith, 18 years his junior, and began another relationship. Milk and Smith returned to San Francisco, where they lived on money they had saved. [30] In March 1973, after a roll of film Milk left at a local shop was ruined, he and Smith opened a camera store on Castro Street with their last $1,000. [32] [33]
In 2003, the story of Milk's assassination and of the White Night Riot was featured in an exhibition created by the GLBT Historical Society, a San Francisco museum, archives and research center to which the estate of Scott Smith donated Milk's personal belongings that were preserved after his death. "Saint Harvey: The Life and Afterlife of a ...
Harvey Milk was known in San Francisco for his activism against then-popular anti-gay initiatives. He made history when the city elected him as city supervisor in 1977. And, during his time in ...
Scott Smith (activist) (1948–1995), Harvey Milk's lover Scott Smith (futurist) (born 1967), futurist Scott L. Smith Jr. (born 1983), American author and attorney
On a cool autumn morning 45 years ago, Dianne Feinstein was the first to find the body. It was November 1978, and San Francisco Supervisor Harvey Milk had just been shot dead in his City Hall office.
On her very last day on Earth, Feinstein was working in the Senate chamber she helped shape for three decades
Harvey Milk, here with his sister-in-law in front of Castro Camera in 1973. Milk, an avid amateur photographer, [1] was disappointed over a developer ruining a roll of film. . With his then-partner, Scott Smith, Milk opened the store in 1972, using the last $1,000 of their savi