Details about the Fred Gray Association are sketchy at best, and the extant historical documents provide only the most basic details. Ed Folsom and Ken Price characterize the group as "a loose confederation of young men who seemed anxious to explore new possibilities of male-male affection" (Re-Scripting 62). Members of the group included Walt Whitman, Nat Bloom, and John Frederick Schiller Gray (after whom the group seems to have been named), Nat Gray, Charles Kingsley, Charles Chauncey, Hugo Fritsch, a man known only as "Perkins" and someone referred to as "Raymond" that may be Henry J. Raymond.
Whitman's letters speak of the group's adventures while "wandering the east side of the city [...] in the lager beer saloons" (Allen 316). In Whitman's memories of Pfaff's, his evenings with the Fred Gray Association "conjure[d] up animation, hilarity and 'sparkle'" (Stansell 118).
According to Stephanie Blalock, Fred Gray's military service and later marriage potentially complicate conventional wisdom about the workings of the Bohemian crowd at Pfaff's, which included other students from the New York medical community as well. Blalock argues that these links between the Broadway medical community and the frequenters at Pfaff's raise critical questions about Whitman's interests in nursing during the Civil War and about "his efforts to heal the national body with his postwar editions of Leaves of Grass" (60).
Allen quotes a letter from September 11, 1864, from Whitman to William O'Connor about his trip to New York. In this letter, he writes of his "amusements" that "last night I was with some of my friends of Fred Gray association, till late wandering the east side of the city first in the lager beer saloons & then elsewhere" (316).
[pages:316]Blalock claims that Gray's biography sheds light on Whitman's connections with the crowd at Pfaff's as well as the broader New York medical community. Blalock suggests that Whitman's interests in Gray indicate Whitman's more literate and polished tastes above his associations with Pfaff's Bohemian crowd. Whitman's role in the Fred Gray Association can be linked to his broader interests in American literary and medical practices.
Shively doesn't mention the group by name, but he goes into great detail about Whitman's relationship with one of the group's members: Fred Vaughan.
"A loose confederation of young men who seemed anxious to explore new possibilities of male-male affection."
[pages:62]It was at Pfaff's," write Folsom and Price, "that Whitman joined the 'Fred Gray Association,' a loose confederation of young men who seemed anxious to explore new possibilities of male-male affection."
Mentions the "Fred Gray Association" as perhaps New York's first gay society.
Suggests that the group is named after a physician's son, Frederick Schiller Gray. Members included Frederick's brother Nat, Charles Chauncey, Charles Kingsley (an athlete), and Hugo Fritsch.
[pages:38, 187]Stansell writes that at Pfaff's Whitman "regularly socialized with a group of young male friends -- 'the beautiful young men?' -- dubbed the 'Fred Gray Association' after one of their principals" (107).
Stansell writes that in Whitman's memories of Pfaff's, his evenings with the Fred Gray Association "conjures up animation, hilarity and 'sparkle'" (118).
[pages:107,111,118]The Fred Gray Association is not specifically mentioned in this letter, but both Whitman and Fritsch were core members of the group.
The Fred Gray Association is not specifically mentioned in this letter, but both Whitman and Bloom were core members of the group.
The Fred Gray Association is not specifically mentioned in this letter, but both Whitman and Bloom were core members of the group.
The Fred Gray Association is not specifically mentioned in this letter, but Whitman, Bloom and Gray were core members of the group.
Whitman mentions having gone out with some of his friends from the Fred Gray association.
[pages:241]27 Memorial Drive West, Bethlehem, PA 18015