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Cleve Jones
Cleve Jones
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Cleve Jones (born October 11, 1954) is an American AIDS and LGBT rights activist.[1] He conceived the NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt, which has become, at 54 tons, the world's largest piece of community folk art as of 2020. In 1983 at the onset of the AIDS pandemic, Jones co-founded the San Francisco AIDS Foundation, which has grown into one of the largest and most influential advocacy organizations empowering people with AIDS in the United States.

Key Information

Early life

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Cleve Jones marching at the National Equality March, 2009

Jones was born in West Lafayette, Indiana. He moved with his family to Scottsdale, Arizona, when he was 14 and was a student at Arizona State University for a time.[2] Jones claimed, however, he never really accepted the Phoenix area as his home.[2] His father was a psychologist and his mother was a Quaker, a faith she held at least in part to benefit her son in the era of the draft for the Vietnam War.[2] He did not reveal his sexual orientation to his parents until he was 18.[3][2]

His career as an activist began in San Francisco during the turbulent 1970s when, as a newcomer to the city, he was befriended by pioneer gay-rights leader Harvey Milk. Jones worked as a student intern in Milk's office while studying political science at San Francisco State University.[4][5] During the 1970s, Jones was also involved in the Coors boycott.[6]

Career

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In 1981, Jones went to work in the district office of State Assemblyman Art Agnos.[7] In 1982, when AIDS was still a new and largely underestimated threat, Jones co-founded the San Francisco AIDS Foundation,[8] then called the Kaposi's Sarcoma Research and Education Foundation, with Marcus Conant, Frank Jacobson, and Richard Keller.[9] They reorganized as the San Francisco AIDS Foundation in 1984.[10][11]

Jones conceived the idea of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at a candlelight memorial for Harvey Milk in 1985 and in 1987 created the first quilt panel in honor of his friend Marvin Feldman.[12] The AIDS Memorial Quilt has grown to become the world's largest community arts project, memorializing the lives of over 85,000 Americans killed by AIDS.[13]

Jones ran for a position on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors in the November 3, 1992 election.[14]

Jones has been working with UNITE HERE, the hotel, restaurant, and garment workers' labor union on homophobia issues.[11] He is a driving force behind the Sleep With The Right People campaign, which aims to convince LGBT tourists to stay only in hotels that respect the rights of their workers.[15] Another part of Jones's work with UNITE HERE is making the labor movement more open to LGBTQ members.[16]

In an interview in November 2016 with Terry Gross on NPR radio talk show Fresh Air, Jones described his status as HIV-positive, and said while he first learned of his status when tests for infection came out in the 1980s, he was likely infected with the virus around the winter of 1978 or 1979, based on blood samples collected from him as part of a study he volunteered for.[3]

In the same interview, Jones also talked about the time when he became seriously ill, and how he responded rapidly to the "cocktail" of drugs[17] that fought the virus, in the earliest trials of it. He described his present health as good.[3] The interview was based on Jones's book, When We Rise: My Life in the Movement, and the television program When We Rise, broadcast in February and March 2017 on ABC in the USA.[3][18] A theme of the interview was that activism saved his life, as he was in the early drug trials, part of the group pushing the FDA (US Food and Drug Administration) to stop doing double-blind trials as soon as it was clear that the cocktail of drugs saved lives.

Film, theater and major parades

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Jones is portrayed by actor Emile Hirsch in Milk, director Gus Van Sant's 2008 biopic of Harvey Milk.[11] He is prominently featured in And the Band Played On, Randy Shilts's best-selling 1987 work of non-fiction about the AIDS epidemic in the United States. Jones was also featured in the 1995 documentary film The Castro.

Jones took part in a documentary, Echoes of Yourself in the Mirror, about the HIV/AIDS epidemic, speaking during World AIDS Day in 2005. In the documentary he talks about the idea behind the AIDS Memorial Quilt, as well as the activism of San Francisco citizens in the 1970s and '80s to help people affected by AIDS and to figure out what the disease was. The film also looks at the impact HIV/AIDS is having in communities of color, and the young.

He was one of the Official Grand Marshals of the 2009 NYC LGBT Pride March, produced by Heritage of Pride joining Dustin Lance Black and Anne Kronenberg on June 28, 2009.[19] In August 2009, Jones was an official Grand Marshal of the Vancouver Pride Parade.

He participated as an actor in the Los Angeles premiere of 8, a condensed theatrical re-enactment of the Perry v. Schwarzenegger trial's closure, on March 3, 2012. He is portrayed by actors Austin P. McKenzie and Guy Pearce in the 2017 ABC television miniseries When We Rise, directed by Gus Van Sant. He also had a cameo appearance playing himself in Looking: The Movie in 2016. Additionally, Jones is portrayed by actor Augustus Oicle in the 2023 Showtime limited series, Fellow Travelers, in the episode titled "White Nights."

See also

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References

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Bibliography

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from Grokipedia
Cleve Jones (born October 11, 1954) is an American activist, author, and lecturer recognized for founding the NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt, the largest ongoing community arts project in the world, comprising over 54 tons of panels commemorating individuals lost to AIDS. Jones co-founded the San Francisco AIDS Foundation in 1983 amid the early AIDS crisis, contributing to early advocacy efforts that pressured public health responses and funding allocations. He became active in gay rights in the 1970s after moving to San Francisco as a teenager, where he worked closely with Harvey Milk on political campaigns and community organizing before Milk's assassination in 1978. The AIDS Memorial Quilt originated from Jones's 1985 idea during a candlelight march, evolving into a global symbol that first displayed on the in 1987 and has since influenced public awareness and policy on . Jones has also authored : My Life in the Movement, chronicling his experiences in the LGBTQ rights struggle, and continues labor organizing with .

Early Life

Childhood and Family Background

Cleve Jones was born on October 11, 1954, in West Lafayette, Indiana, to a family that later practiced the Quaker faith. His mother introduced him to Quaker meetings during his youth, which he later reflected may have been intended to prepare him for conscientious objector status amid the Vietnam War draft. The family relocated to Scottsdale, Arizona, where Jones spent much of his childhood and adolescence. Growing up in , Jones experienced social challenges typical of the era for individuals aware of their same-sex attractions, including during classes at . He internalized societal stigma around from an early age but kept his orientation private from his parents initially, pondering whether others shared his experiences. One of his earliest childhood memories involved a handmade by his grandmother, which she used to wrap him in when he was ill at home. By age 17, Jones had confided his to his parents, who reacted with horror, prompting him to plan his departure from . He first visited that year as an antiwar activist, drawn to its architecture and radical political scene, though still closeted to his family. These formative years in a conservative-leaning environment shaped his subsequent move to in the early 1970s to live more openly as a gay man.

Initial Activism and Education

Jones began his activism during high school in the late 1960s and early 1970s, joining an anti-Vietnam War organization and organizing a student walkout to protest the conflict. While still in high school, he was inspired by a 1971 Life magazine article on the gay liberation movement, which introduced him to organized efforts for homosexual rights amid a period of personal struggle with his sexuality. Following high school graduation around 1972, Jones engaged with the (UFW) union after his family relocated from to , participating in organizing efforts among grape pickers led by . In 1973, at age 19, he hitchhiked from to with limited funds, drawn by the city's radical political scene and architecture during an initial visit at 17. Jones pursued higher education at from 1977 to 1984, where he studied alongside courses in , , and , including classes on variations in human sexuality taught by John DeCecco. The university provided a supportive environment for gay students, with resources like the gay student union that aligned with his emerging involvement in activism in the early 1970s. During this period, he balanced studies with early political organizing, including recruitment efforts against the 1978 Briggs Initiative (Proposition 6), which sought to ban gay teachers from public schools.

San Francisco Political Involvement

Association with Harvey Milk

Cleve Jones met on Castro Street in during the early 1970s, shortly after Jones relocated to the city and began engaging in the movement. Milk, then operating Castro Camera as a hub for , became a mentor to the younger Jones, guiding his early activism amid the burgeoning visibility of rights efforts in the Castro district. Following Milk's election to the on November 8, 1977, Jones served as a student intern in Milk's City Hall office while pursuing political science studies at . In this role, Jones assisted with constituent services and campaign-related tasks, contributing to Milk's advocacy for LGBTQ rights, affordable housing, and opposition to anti-gay legislation like Proposition 6 (the Briggs Initiative), which sought to ban gay individuals from teaching in California public schools and was defeated on November 7, 1978. Their collaboration underscored Milk's strategy of building coalitions across diverse neighborhoods, with Jones representing the influx of young activists drawn to San Francisco's political scene. Jones's internship extended until Milk's assassination on November 27, 1978, alongside Mayor , by former supervisor . Jones was among the first to view Milk's body in the aftermath, an experience that profoundly shaped his commitment to activism, as he later recounted it crystallized his sense of purpose amid personal grief and political upheaval. This period marked Jones's transition from mentee to independent organizer, carrying forward Milk's emphasis on visibility and electoral engagement in the face of institutional resistance.

Response to 1978 Assassinations

Following the assassinations of Mayor and Supervisor by former supervisor on November 27, 1978, Cleve Jones, then a student intern in Milk's City Hall office, expressed profound personal devastation, viewing Milk as a mentor whose death marked a pivotal loss for the gay rights movement. Jones later recounted the immediate aftermath as a catalyst that "fixed my course," transforming his from inspiration under Milk to direct confrontation with institutional failures. The most significant aspect of Jones's response unfolded after White's trial concluded on May 21, 1979, when a convicted him of rather than first- or second-degree , citing diminished capacity partly attributed to White's consumption of —a detail popularized as the "." Jones, outraged by what he and others perceived as a that undervalued the lives of and Moscone, led a march of approximately 3,000 people from the Castro District down Market Street to City Hall, chanting slogans demanding accountability. This demonstration escalated into the White Night riots, the most violent protests in San Francisco's LGBTQ history, involving clashes with police, the smashing of over 100 windows at City Hall, the overturning and burning of at least a dozen police vehicles, and an estimated $1 million in property damage. Jones's leadership in initiating the march underscored a shift toward militant resistance against perceived leniency in the justice system, though he did not endorse the subsequent violence, which some participants directed at symbols of authority like police stations and the sculpture outside City Hall. The events prompted a backlash, including intensified police raids on gay bars, but also galvanized long-term organizing by affirming the community's willingness to challenge power structures directly.

AIDS Crisis Response

Founding of Key Organizations

In response to the escalating AIDS crisis in during the early 1980s, Cleve Jones co-founded the San Francisco AIDS Foundation (SFAF) in April 1983 alongside physicians Marcus Conant, Frank Jacobson, and Richard Keller. The organization emerged from community efforts to provide , support services, and for those affected by the emerging , which by 1983 had claimed numerous lives in the city's gay community and overwhelmed local health resources. SFAF quickly expanded to offer testing, counseling, and policy advocacy, growing into one of the largest AIDS service providers in the United States with an annual exceeding $50 million by the 2010s. Seeking a more personal and visible way to memorialize the deceased amid government inaction, Jones conceived the AIDS Memorial Quilt in November 1985 during a for slain supervisor and Mayor . Inspired by protest banners on his apartment wall that inadvertently formed a when names of AIDS victims were added, Jones created the first quilt panel in memory of his friend Marvin Feldman and recruited volunteers including Mike Smith and Gert McQuarry to formalize the project. This led to the establishment of the NAMES Project Foundation in 1987 as a nonprofit to coordinate the creation, collection, and display of individualized 3-by-6-foot panels sewn into larger blocks, transforming individual grief into a collective symbol that by 1988 covered the during its first major public unveiling. The Quilt has since grown to over 48,000 panels honoring more than 94,000 individuals, serving as a tool for raising awareness and funds, with displays viewed by millions worldwide.

Development of the AIDS Memorial Quilt

The AIDS Memorial Quilt originated from an event on November 27, 1985, during San Francisco's annual candlelight march honoring the assassinations of Harvey Milk and George Moscone. Cleve Jones, a gay rights activist, directed participants to write names of friends and loved ones who had died from AIDS on paper placards, which were then taped to the Federal Building. The assemblage of papers created a visual patchwork resembling a quilt, prompting Jones to envision a tangible memorial in that medium. In 1987, Jones and associates initiated the sewing of actual quilt panels, with the first honoring Marvin Feldman, a friend who had succumbed to AIDS. These panels, standardized at three by six feet to evoke a grave's dimensions, were crafted using donated fabrics and personal mementos by families and friends of the deceased. The NAMES Project Foundation was founded that year to systematize panel collection and assembly, transforming individual tributes into a cohesive community-driven artwork. The quilt's inaugural public exhibition occurred on October 11, 1987, coinciding with the National March on Washington for Lesbian and Gay Rights, where 1,920 panels were laid out on the , spanning six city blocks and representing over 1,900 lives lost. This display underscored the epidemic's scale amid limited mainstream acknowledgment. In 1988, a national tour across 20 U.S. cities expanded the quilt to more than 6,000 panels and raised $500,000 for AIDS service organizations through visitor contributions.

Broader Advocacy and Career

Labor Union Organizing

Since 2005, Cleve Jones has served as a Community and Political Coordinator for , an international labor union representing approximately 270,000 workers in the , , food service, and sectors across . In this capacity, he has focused on combating homophobia within the union and the broader , advocating for policies that enhance safety and inclusivity for LGBTQ employees. Jones has led coalitions comprising LGBTQ advocates and union members to challenge major corporations on issues of and workplace protections. His efforts emphasize building internal campaigns to support drives, particularly in environments where workers face risks from employer retaliation, drawing on strategies like discreet organizing to foster power. Through these initiatives, he has sought to integrate LGBTQ rights into labor organizing, promoting alliances that address intersecting vulnerabilities in low-wage service jobs. By 2024, Jones's tenure with spanned nearly two decades, during which he contributed to making the labor movement more receptive to diverse identities amid ongoing industry challenges like precarious employment and corporate resistance to .

Authorship and Media Projects

Cleve Jones authored the When We Rise: My Life in the Movement, published by on November 29, 2016. The book details his involvement in the LGBTQ rights movement starting in the 1970s scene, his friendships with figures like , the personal toll of the AIDS epidemic—including the loss of numerous associates and his own near-fatal illness—and subsequent advocacy for marriage equality and . It received the Lambda Literary Award in the LGBTQ Nonfiction category. The served as partial inspiration for the ABC television miniseries , a four-part production written by that aired from February 27 to March 3, 2017. The series dramatizes key events in LGBTQ history, incorporating elements from Jones's life and , though it expands to include other activists' stories for a broader arc spanning decades. Jones contributed consultations during production but did not serve as a or producer. An version of the memoir, narrated by Jones himself, was released concurrently with the print edition. No other major authored works or media projects by Jones have been documented in primary sources.

Recent Activities

Community Funding Initiatives

In August 2024, Cleve Jones announced the creation of the Cleve Jones Fund to sustain -related organizations he helped establish, amid declining philanthropic support for such causes. The fund, administered by the Horizons Foundation—a Bay Area LGBTQ founded in 1984—prioritizes grants for care, advocacy, prevention efforts targeting racial disparities in diagnoses, and the preservation of the . It specifically directs resources to the AIDS Foundation, which Jones co-founded in 1982, and the National AIDS Memorial, which maintains the Quilt as a community arts project. The fund's launch occurred during Jones' 70th birthday event on October 11, 2024—coinciding with —at San Francisco's Hibernia Bank building. This gala, hosted by performers Juanita More! and , featured appearances by the and others, with ticket prices ranging from $50 for general admission to $250 for premium experiences including meet-and-greets. Proceeds aimed to bolster operations strained by factors such as reduced participation in rides like AIDS/Lifecycle, which announced its conclusion after the 2025 event. Jones described the initiative as a means to perpetuate his advocacy legacy, stating, "We have every reason to be proud, but that doesn’t mean it’s over." Supporters, including , have praised it as a continuation of Jones' foundational role in community resilience against . By channeling donations through Horizons, the fund enables targeted, tax-deductible contributions to frontline LGBTQ and services in the .

Ongoing Political Engagements

Jones continues to serve as a and political coordinator for International Union, mobilizing diverse worker coalitions for causes such as immigrant rights, marriage equality, and opposition to discriminatory corporate practices in the . Following the 2024 U.S. , Jones has focused on organizing resistance to the second Trump administration, describing it as a "fascist " intent on dismantling democratic institutions, enriching billionaires, and eroding including LGBTQ+ protections. On October 18, 2025, he addressed the No Kings Day of Action rally in , where he called for a "massive campaign of nonviolent and non-cooperation," emphasizing the need to build offline networks, strengthen labor unions, and leverage individual skills to safeguard . He reiterated that "we will not despair... This is our country," framing the effort as essential to counter threats like federal troop deployments in cities and attacks on healthcare access. Jones has publicly criticized specific administration actions perceived as reversals of prior gains, including June 2025 efforts to rename the USS —a vessel honoring his mentor—in a move he dismissed as a distraction tactic, and policies altering gender markers on passports alongside potential cuts to funding. In interviews, he has expressed alarm that "every advance we've made is possibly going to be reversed," urging sustained offline activism over complacency amid these developments.

Personal Life and Health

Relationships and Personal Challenges

Jones grappled with profound personal challenges from an early age, contemplating suicide as a teenager amid the isolation of unrecognized homosexuality in mid-20th-century America, where societal discussion of same-sex attraction was virtually absent until encounters with rare media depictions, such as a Life magazine article, affirmed the existence of others like him. Upon relocating to San Francisco in 1971 at age 17, he immersed himself in the burgeoning gay liberation scene, forging intense bonds with friends and lovers characterized by both unprecedented sexual freedom and pervasive risks of violence and discrimination. These relationships, often transient and intertwined with political activism under mentors like Harvey Milk, unfolded against a backdrop of routine physical assaults; Jones himself endured multiple beatings and stabbings during this period. The AIDS epidemic intensified these trials, as Jones witnessed the deaths of innumerable close associates—friends, lovers, and fellow activists—while confronting his own HIV-positive diagnosis in the 1980s, which led to a decade of debilitating illness and near-fatal decline before antiretroviral therapies became viable. His survival hinged on communal support networks forged in , underscoring the causal interplay between personal vulnerability and collective response to the crisis's disproportionate toll on , marked by inadequate medical and stigma-driven neglect. Jones has described this era's emotional toll as an unrelenting "," with fragility of life etched into his worldview through repeated loss and his own brush with mortality.

Reflections on Mortality

Jones has often described the AIDS epidemic's erosion of his social circle, recounting that by November 1985, "almost everyone I knew was dead or dying" amid the crisis's unchecked spread in San Francisco's Castro district. This relentless loss fueled a profound confrontation with mortality, transforming personal grief into activist resolve, as he channeled despair over friends' deaths into the creation of the AIDS Memorial Quilt to preserve their names and stories against societal neglect. Having tested HIV-positive soon after the virus's identification, Jones endured his own near-fatal decline, later reflecting that he was "dying of AIDS and could barely walk" before treatment breakthroughs—spurred by groups like —enabled his survival. These experiences instilled a lasting awareness of human vulnerability, which he has summarized as being "well aware how fragile life is," a perspective shaped by witnessing comrades succumb rapidly and publicly, including collapses and deaths in neighborhood streets during the 1980s. In ongoing reflections, Jones underscores that the epidemic's shadow persists, with individuals still succumbing to AIDS-related illnesses despite medical progress, urging continued action to prevent historical amnesia about the over one million American deaths it claimed. , now encompassing panels for more than 50,000 individuals, embodies his view of mortality not as oblivion but as a call to and prevention, countering the era's stigma that sought to silence the deceased.

Legacy and Reception

Positive Impacts and Achievements

Cleve Jones's most enduring achievement is the creation of the AIDS Memorial Quilt through the NAMES Project Foundation, which he co-founded in 1987 after conceiving the idea in 1985 during a candlelight vigil. The Quilt began with individual panels honoring friends lost to AIDS, such as the first panel for Marvin Feldman, and rapidly expanded to nearly 50,000 panels by 2020, commemorating over 110,000 individuals and weighing 54 tons, making it the world's largest community folk art project. Its inaugural major display on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., on October 11, 1987, drew 48,000 attendees and visually demonstrated the epidemic's scale, humanizing victims and spurring national awareness and policy responses to HIV/AIDS. The Quilt's exhibitions, including global displays in over 20 countries by 1989, served as a tool for , remembrance, and advocacy, nominated for the 1989 for its impact. Early tours raised nearly $500,000 in 1988 for AIDS service organizations, while the associated documentary Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 1989, further amplifying its message. Ongoing initiatives, such as the Quilt's use in prevention , continue to foster intergenerational on the epidemic's legacy and promote . In 1983, Jones co-founded the San Francisco AIDS Foundation (SFAF), which evolved into one of the largest community-based organizations, providing direct services, prevention programs, and policy advocacy that have supported thousands in the Bay Area and influenced national standards for care. The foundation's growth under early leadership like Jones's contributed to reduced transmission rates through education and access to treatments, exemplifying effective grassroots response to crises. Jones's decades-long activism, spanning over 50 years, included pivotal work with in the 1970s, aiding campaigns for visibility and rights in , including assistance in producing the original used in the 1978 . These efforts helped lay groundwork for political gains, such as the of openly officials and broader acceptance, while his memoir When We Rise (2016), adapted into an ABC miniseries, documented the movement's history and inspired renewed engagement. Jones received the Distinguished Leadership Award in 2022 and a lifetime achievement award for the Quilt's role in altering the trajectory of the AIDS crisis.

Criticisms and Controversies

Jones played a prominent role in leading a protest march following the May 21, 1979, announcement of Dan White's manslaughter conviction for the assassinations of and , which escalated into the White Night riots. The events involved crowds smashing windows at City Hall, setting police cars ablaze, and clashing with , resulting in over 100 arrests and significant estimated in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. While supporters viewed the riots as an expression of profound outrage against perceived judicial leniency in a high-profile case involving anti-gay violence, critics, including city officials and police, condemned the violence as destructive vigilantism that undermined the . Jones has described the riots as "the most violent uprising in the history of the LGBTQ movement," reflecting a perspective that frames the unrest as a necessary amid systemic , though this characterization has drawn rebuke from those prioritizing non-violent . No charges were filed against him personally for , but his in mobilizing the crowd positioned him at the center of debates over the ethics of radical tactics in the gay rights struggle. Beyond early activism, Jones has encountered limited public controversies, with personal critiques often limited to anecdotal observations of human flaws rather than substantive scandals; for instance, a profile noted his "" amid broader praise for his resilience. His involvement in labor organizing and AIDS advocacy has occasionally intersected with internal movement tensions, such as calls for escalated protests against political figures like in over perceived delays in LGBTQ rights advancements, but these reflect strategic disagreements rather than personal misconduct. A 2022 dispute over a rent increase on his Castro District apartment highlighted broader housing tensions, though it elicited sympathy for Jones as a long-term tenant rather than criticism of his conduct.

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