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A Real Live Brokeback Cowboy

By Annie Anderson, In These Times. Posted April 26, 2006.


What's the problem with unrecognized gay relationships? A heartbreaking interview takes a shot at that question.
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For folks like Samuel K. Beaumont Sr., this year's Defense of Marriage Acts, set to appear in November on ballots in Alabama, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Idaho, Virginia and Wisconsin, do more than legislate the definition of marriage.

They perpetuate a cruel injustice that Beaumont knows well.

The documentary film "Tying the Knot" chronicles the five-year legal battle Beaumont waged to keep the Bristow, Okla., ranch that he and partner Earl Meadows shared for 24 years. When Meadows died in 2000, a gaggle of his long-lost cousins went to court and evicted Beaumont from the 80-acre ranch, taking at once his home and livelihood. Despite Meadows' notarized will, which left his estate to Beaumont, and what Beaumont calls the couple's "marriage," Oklahoma courts bestowed the estate to the Meadows family.

Life ransacked, resources depleted and hope gone, Beaumont still remains in the lurch where "Tying the Knot" found him back in 2004. In These Times caught up with the 62-year-old rancher to talk about what has transpired since the film's completion.

While gay marriage continues as a hot button issue, your story is also interesting in light of the buzz surrounding the movie "Brokeback Mountain." What do you think about the national conversation this film has spurred?

I have not seen "Brokeback Mountain." I probably won't 'til it comes out on DVD. But I feel akin to it.

As to marriage, they should take marriage and put it back in a church where it was to start with and separate the state from it. If you've been with somebody for all them years, it doesn't matter whether you're both male, both female, or male and female. If you're together, common law marriage, or whatever you want to call it, should work.

Do you think gay marriage will be legalized soon?

I think someday. It's just like the segregation thing was. It's gonna hit the straws. It's got to be done to have everything equal for everybody -- equal rights. The Constitution provides it. It's just getting the darn people who are dragging their feet out of the way. If we hadn't had this president, it probably already would've been done. But the worst enemies that we have are the ones that's in the closet. And the ones that believe all of a sudden they get religion and they ain't gay no more. Heck, if you're born that way, you're born that way. Ain't no changing it. You can get religion all you want to -- the good Lord made you, and he ain't gonna change you.

You have been affected by your inability to lawfully wed Earl

I think the term is "screwed." I lost the estate. It was an 80-acre ranch. It had four houses on it. And of course I had cattle, horses and all that. It cost me a lot of money that I couldn't afford. The attorney told me that he'd take the case for $5,000, and when I got through, I was paying about $33,000, and he still wants another $8,000. And I got nothing.

And I'm still fighting them over my property here, in Cromwell, where I live. Now the estate wants me to sell part of it to pay $13,000-something for taxes and $5,000-something for the lawyer, their lawyer.

Although your union with Earl was never recognized by law, you considered yourself married. Did you have a service?

It was private between us. That was in July of '77. We had gotten together on Jan. 15, so it was six months to the day because it was July 15. We met on a pier out on the Arkansas River. I was sitting there watching the water and the fish go by, and he come up behind me and started talking. We got to talking, and we talked 'til 2:30 or so in the morning. And then I went home, and he went home. Next night, we met at my house.

Did your family and friends know you were gay?

I came out to everybody when I come back from Vietnam in 1969. You mature a lot when you don't know if you'll wake up the next day and live. One day at a time, and you live it to its best. You learn a lot of things about yourself that you didn't know before. 'Course I knew it. I've known it all along, I just didn't know what it was. And so I came out then. I'm sure Earl knew it before he was married, knew it when he was growing up. The thing was, you grew up, got married and had kids.

You and Earl raised three sons from your previous marriage. Did your family ever face discrimination in Bristow (population 4,300)?

There wasn't nothing like that against us. We got along good. Most of the upper crust of town Earl knew well. They didn't care, and we didn't push it on them. Most of them had known Earl most of his life. He was born in Bristow. He'd went to school with them, college with some of them. We never had any problems.


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Annie Anderson is an intern at In These Times and a producer at WGN Radio in Chicago.

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Interview Al Gore?
Posted by: Steven Wanzell on Apr 26, 2006 11:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Insightful interview, Annie! Have you investigated the possibility of getting an interview with Al Gore, since his recent reference to this issue as "tyranny" against LGBT Americans?

Steven Wanzell
artist/activist/ex-American
www.wanzellarts.com.ar

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

True compassion
Posted by: Gregor on Apr 28, 2006 10:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is a mystery to me that people are against Gays at all. In every civilization there have been Gay Unions. Even in ancient times there was mention of Gay experiences and Gay love. The Romans, Greeks, all much more developed in their thinking and analytical skills than our civilization. Jerimiah and King David and Saul had mentioned homosexual acts. But isn't love across the Board? Doesn't love come to everyone? Why can't we honor that?
I had a thought though. Since in the military they have that policy "Don't ask don't tell" soon it will be all the Gays and Lesbians taking over the jobs that our soldiers leave and then they will have the power! Okay, so no one ever has a sense of humor any more.

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About Time For Equal Rights
Posted by: Sarah_UK on Apr 29, 2006 8:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We have had legal gay marriage (called civil partnership) in the UK since 19th December 2005.
There was, of course, an expected public outcry. However the conservative minded masses that many feared would call for uproar simply did not materialise. It was quite surreal to watch news footage of these partnerships taking place as smoothly as had my own (hetrosexual) non-church wedding a few years earlier. The first "gay weddings" went off without a single protestor in almost all cases. It seems that many of the deeply conservative people we expected to make themselves heard simply griped to thier freinds and relations. It seems even they, begrudgingly, couldn't avoid the realities of modern life.
Perhaps America needs to make a reliable study of public oppinion, because it would be my guess that there isn't as much opposition to gay marriage as the vocal minorities would have you all think.
Sarah
“If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor. If an elephant has its foot on the tail of a mouse and you say that you are neutral, the mouse will not appreciate your neutrality.” Archbishop Desmond Tutu

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A Good Man.
Posted by: SanFranDuke on Jun 12, 2006 3:44 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Fiction is always based on truth as this article indicates. Tears of sorrow and anger came as I read this just as they did when I watched Brokeback Mountain.

The so-called "Christian" right is always selectively quoting the Founding Fathers and the authors of the Constitution. Here is a quote you will not hear from them:

"Those who give up essential liberty for a temporary sense of security deserve neither liberty nor security." - Benjamin Franklin

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» RE: A Good Man. Posted by: Gregor
» RE: A Good Man. Posted by: Gregor