Lesbians Over Age Fifty (LOAF), Old Lesbian Oral Herstory Project (OLOHP)
Known for
Lesbian community activism
Jean Arden Eversmeyer, known as Arden Eversmeyer (April 4,1931 – November 14, 2022), founded the organizations Lesbians Over Age Fifty (LOAF) and Old Lesbian Oral Herstory Project (OLOHP) to give older lesbians visibility and a sense of community and to document their stories.[1]
In 1952, she met her first partner, Tommie Russum.[1]
After Russum's death in 1985, Eversmeyer became involved in community activism focused on lesbians.[2] She started the organization Lesbians Over Age Fifty in 1987 to create safe meeting places and a social network for mid-life and older lesbians in Houston.[1][3] For 14 years, Eversmeyer served on the steering committee of Old Lesbians Organizing for Change, a national organization for lesbians age 55 and older working to confront ageism and promote social justice.[2][4]
In 1987, Eversmeyer became a partner to Charlotte Avery, and they married in 2008.[1] Avery died on April 4, 2018.[2]
In 1998, Eversmeyer founded the Old Lesbian Oral Herstory Project, which conducts interviews with lesbians age 70 and older to capture their personal stories and document the life of lesbians in the 20th century.[1][5] Project volunteers have collected over 800 stories from women around the world.[1] OLOHP has published two books of oral histories: A Gift of Age: Old Lesbian Life Stories (2009) and Without Apology: Old Lesbian Life Stories (2012).[1] Transcripts, audio recordings, photographs, and other materials from OLOHP are archived at the Sophia Smith Collection of Women's History at the Smith College Libraries in Northampton, Massachusetts.[6]
Arden's work with OLOHP was the subject of a documentary short film called Old Lesbians, directed and edited by Meghan McDonough in 2023.[7]Old Lesbians received the Audible/Aesthetica Listening Pitch[8] and was commissioned by The Guardian.[9]
For six years, Eversmeyer was a mayoral appointee to the Houston Agency on Aging.[2]
Later life and death
In 2014, the National Women's History Alliance, a nonprofit educational organization, named Eversmeyer one of its Women of Character, Courage and Commitment honorees for her work on the Old Lesbian Oral Herstory Project.[10]
Mary Speegle, creator of the podcast The Lesbian Story Project, combined two interviews with Eversmeyer into a 45-minute episode published on October 17, 2016.[11]
Eversmeyer died in Houston on November 14, 2022.[2]