Address:
Allan L. Rock Papers, 1968-1987 (majority within 1972-1976)
Using These Materials
- Restrictions:
- The collection is open for research.
Summary
- Abstract:
- The Allan L. Rock papers consist primarily of materials from the various court cases in which Rock was involved in the 1970's. The collection includes transcripts of hearings, submissions to various courts, and correspondence regarding the cases. Also included are transcripts and correspondence from several cases similar to Rock's, some of which directly benefited from the 1976 Rock decision. This collection presents some early and significant decisions about gay rights and is valuable in research about gay rights, especially surrounding issues of national security. The collection is divided into five main series: Correspondence, Intelligence Files, Litigation, Press and Topical Files.
- Extent:
-
4.5 Linear Feet
6 boxes - Authors:
- Legacy finding aid encoded for ArchivesSpace in 2020 by Rachel McCoucha and Rebecca Huffman
Background
- Scope and Content:
-
The Allan L. Rock papers consist primarily of materials from the various court cases in which Rock was involved in the 1970's. The collection includes transcripts of hearings, submissions to various courts, and correspondence regarding the cases. Also included are transcripts and correspondence from several cases similar to Rock's, some of which directly benefited from the 1976 Rock decision. This collection presents some early and significant decisions about gay rights and is valuable in research about gay rights, especially surrounding issues of national security. The collection is divided into five main series: Correspondence, Intelligence Files, Litigation, Press and Topical Files.
The Correspondence series includes one folder of personal correspondence, which is primarily letters written to a 1968 love interest. The Press folder contains various letters and responses--from the obscene to the mundane -- to articles written about Rock. The primary portion of the Correspondence series is made up of letters separated from the litigation files which recount decisions and court actions. These are divide into two sub-series: non- Rock related cases and Rock. The non-Rock cases include all correspondence which came into Rock's possession from the cases of Dubbs, Fultun, Gayer, Kovalich, Preston, and Tabler. The Rock correspondence consists of 5 folders of material, is organized chronologically, and includes all correspondence between Rock and those involved in his litigation process. The Correspondence series provides a thorough chronological account of all legal actions and documents Rock's reactions to each of the cases.
The Intelligence Files series contains all files provided to Rock from the Air Force, Army, Defense Industrial Security Clearance Office (DISCO), FBI, Industrial Security Clearance Review Offices (ISCRO), Navy and the U.S. Civil Service Commission. The files date from 1960 through the 1970s. Rock's original organization of this material was largely preserved, since the materials often contain multiple dates (of the request and of the original investigation).
The Litigation series contains all briefs, filings and other legal documentation of cases, all of which involve questions of the rights of homosexual individuals to hold security clearance. The series begins with the sub-series of Non-Rock Related Cases. These include cases brought by Julie Dubbs, John Napier Eaves, Roy Lee Fultun, Richard Gayer, Jean Kovalich, Elisha Stroud Marsh, Warren Gene Preston, Jack Schwarz, Oliver W. Sipple, the Society for Individual Rights, Otis Francis Tabler and Bennington Wentworth. The largest amount of material is available from the Kovalich case, which includes all legal documents and several depositions. Her case is perhaps the most interesting because of her standing as a supervisor within the Department of Defense itself. When she admitted her homosexuality, she was demoted. Eventually, she won her case. The Wentworth and Tabler cases also contain large amounts of material.
The Rock sub-series of the Litigation files consists of 1 linear foot of material. It is organized primarily by case and by chronology within each case. The folders of legal documents and briefs are supplemented by nine bound transcripts and testimonies, all labeled and dated. This sub-series consists of all legal documents for each of the cases in which Rock was involved: Rock v. CIA, Rock v. Department of Defense, and Rock v. State of California.
The Press series is organized into clippings and articles, and press releases. Both of these sub-series contain non-Rock and Rock related divisions, and all material is organized chronologically. The Non- Rock related press clippings and articles are especially interesting for the context they provide, documenting one view of homosexuality in America in the 1970s. These folders contain information about various state decisions on the legalization of homosexual activity, as well as information about the 1973 decision by the American Psychiatric Association which declared that homosexuality was no longer considered a mental disorder.
The Topical Files include an unpublished book manuscript written by Rock in 1978 called In the National Interest. This manuscript details Rock's experiences in the court system and provides his perspective on the actions and decisions of the Department of Defense. This honest account is well researched and provides more than just a re-telling of the events already detailed in the correspondence and litigation files. It includes background information about homosexuality in general, and history about homosexuals' treatment by the Department of Defense.
- Biographical / Historical:
-
Allan Lewis Rock (1929-2009) was Deputy Manager of the Electronic Defense Laboratory Reconnaissance Organization for GTE, Sylvania. Working on sensitive materials, Rock was granted security clearance, up to the Top Secret level by the Department of Defense (DOD). In January of 1972 Rock admitted he was a homosexual in a news conference, after he was questioned about his sexuality by the DOD. His security clearance was revoked. This started a series of hearings which was to last for the next four years.
Born in Hartford, Connecticut, on January 16, 1929, Rock graduated from the University of Michigan in 1956 with a degree in Electrical Engineering. He was involved with defense related research from the time he was at Michigan and was originally granted Top Secret clearance in 1963.
When his clearance was revoked in 1972, Rock filed suit against the Department of Defense in the U.S. District Court in California. Richard S. Farr, Federal Hearing Examiner for the Department of Defense, made the original ruling against Rock. The case against the Department of Defense moved from district court to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, and was addressed in the United States Supreme Court. During the time that he was involved in the cases, a series of injunctions -- one from Supreme Court Justice William L. Brennan in 1975 -- enabled Rock to keep his clearance and continue to work as the case proceeded through the courts. The case was resolved in June of 1976 by Farr's reversal of his original decision. Rock's security clearance was reinstated.
At the same time, Rock was involved in another case. Farr's original 1972 decision stated that Rock was a criminal because he was breaking California Penal code which prohibited homosexual acts, and that this was the primary reason for denying security clearance. Rock, with the help of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) filed a suit against the State of California to attempt to overturn the sodomy laws addressed in the Penal Code. Rock's case against the State of California was rendered moot when homosexual acts were decriminalized in California.
Rock also brought suit against the Central Intelligence Agency, suing for release of his records under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). This case was also resolved out of court with the CIA providing Rock with Intelligence information from several governmental defense departments and agencies.
- Acquisition Information:
- The collection was donated to the Labadie Collection by Allan L. Rock in February, 1989.
- Processing information:
-
Collection processed in April 1998 by Amy Cooper.
- Arrangement:
-
The collection is divided into five main series over six boxes: Correspondence, Intelligence Files, Litigation, Press and Topical Files.
- Rules or Conventions:
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Contents
Using These Materials
- RESTRICTIONS:
-
The collection is open for research.
- USE & PERMISSIONS:
-
Copyright has not been transferred to the Regents of the University of Michigan. Permission to publish must be obtained from the copyright holder(s).
- PREFERRED CITATION:
-
Allan L. Rock Papers, University of Michigan Library (Special Collections Research Center)