What did it mean to be visibly trans in the mid-20th century?
A self-described “card-carrying transsexual,” Alison Laing was a beloved activist and organizer in trans circles throughout her life.
She helped found the Renaissance Transgender Association, served as the executive director of the International Foundation for Gender Education and was a director of the long-running trans conference Fantasia Fair. She also authored Speaking as a Woman, a book that guides trans women through voice training.
But she’s likely more known by her photographs.
These intimate pictures, assumed to be taken by her wife Dottie, chronicle Laing’s gender expression in public settings across the U.S. from 1956 to the early 2000s. The photos consist of Laing soaking up the sun at the beach, lounging in the lush greenery of Vermont and posing in analogue photobooths—all while donning traditional 1950s housewife attire.
These photos are part of a collection on the Digital Transgender Archive, a project that aims to chronicle and digitize the documented experiences of trans people. The archive’s founder, K.J. Rawson, told PBS in 2017 that Laing is a “popular figure” on the site.
It’s easy to see why. There is so much joy evoked throughout this collection of photos. She radiates beauty, and is seemingly uninhibited by the hypertraditional social norms of the time.
Dottie would pass away in 2009, and Laing would follow her in 2019 after a long battle with cancer. Laing was remembered as a “bridge-builder” in the trans community, and her vigorous documentation of her joy and gender expression lives on through this stunning archive.

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