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Died
Jack Bee Garland (9 December 1869[1] 19 September 1936) was a trans man, author, nurse and adventurer. Garland was also known as Elvira Virginia Mugarrieta,[2] Babe Bean,[3] Jack Beam,[4] Jack Maines, and Beebe Beam.[5]
As Beebe Beam
On October 5, 1899, he adopted the male identity of Beebe Beam and accompanied United States Army forces to the Philippines in 1899 to participate in the Philippine War for a year, writing, "I saw war and I lived it."[6] Beam was a cabin boy on the troop transport City of Para to pay his way to the Philippines. Beam became sick on the journey and was set ashore after the captain found out about Beam's history. The enlisted soldiers took up a collection to buy his ticket. When the captain would not allow Beam back on the ship, the soldiers gave Beam a uniform and hid Beam until they were safely away from Hawaii. Beam was discovered again and confined, but, dressed as a soldier, Beam escaped and followed the regiments to their Philippine garrisons. Beam served as a Spanish language interpreter and nurse, living in military camps with the Sixteenth, Twenty-Ninth, Forty-Second, and Forty-Fifth United States Volunteer Infantry regiments. During that time in the Philippines, Beam did not participate in combat, but witnessed the Battle of San Mateo and joined several marches throughout Luzon. Beam accompanied United States military forces to Santa Cruz, Laguna de Bey, Camarines, and Caloccan, as well as Manila and smaller garrisons. Beam spent almost a year in the Philippines before returning to the United States. On October 21, 1900, Beam published "My Life as a Soldier," in the San Francisco Examiner Magazine. Although Beam never enlisted and did not participate in combat, Beam marketed the story as a woman soldier in the Philippines. During World War I, Beam was arrested in December 1917 at Seal Beach as a German spy.[7]
References
[1] Cain PA (1997) Stories from the Gender Garden: Transsexuals and Anti-Discrimination Law. Denver University Law Review [2] Boag, Peter (2005). Go West Young Man, Go East Young Woman: Searching for the Trans in Western Gender History. The Western Historical Quarterly, Vol. 6. No. 4 [3] Boyd NA (1999). The Materiality of Gender: Looking for Lesbian Bodies in Transgender History. Journal of Lesbian Studies Volume: 3 Issue: 3 [4] Staff report (December 30, 1917). Girl Dressed in Men's Togs Held in German Plot. Chicago Tribune [5] LaRocque, Emilie. The Manipulation of Gender Ideals: The Lives of Elvira Virginia Mugarrieta, Babe Bean, Beebe Beam and Jack Bee Garland. M.A. thesis, Sarah Lawrence College, 2005. [6] Gribble, Francis. Women in War. New York: E.P. Dutton, 1917. [7] Staff report (December 30, 1917). Suspected as 'Mme. H.' Washington Post [8] Salmonson, Jessica A. The Encyclopedia of Amazons: Women Warriors from Antiquity to the Modern Era. New York: Paragon House, 1991.
License
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 //creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/