Today In History logo TIH
Former San Francisco supervisor Dan White climbed through a window of City Hall
Featured Event 1978 Event

November 27

Moscone and Milk Assassinated: Tragedy Ignites Gay Rights

Former San Francisco supervisor Dan White climbed through a window of City Hall on November 27, 1978, to avoid the metal detectors, and shot Mayor George Moscone in his office. He then walked down the hall and shot Supervisor Harvey Milk, the first openly gay elected official in California, five times, including twice in the head. White had resigned his seat, then asked Moscone to reappoint him. Moscone refused, partly at Milk's urging. White was convicted of voluntary manslaughter rather than murder after his defense argued diminished capacity due to depression and junk food consumption, a strategy the press dubbed the 'Twinkie defense.' He received a sentence of seven years and eight months. The verdict triggered the White Night riots, in which thousands of gay activists stormed City Hall. White committed suicide in 1985 after his release.

November 27, 1978

48 years ago

Key Figures & Places

What Else Happened on November 27

Talk to History

Have a conversation with historical figures who witnessed this era. Ask questions, explore perspectives, and bring history to life.

Start Talking