Carlett Brown Angianlee (born c. 1927) was a
United States Navy veteran during the 1950s who, if she made it to
Europe, was the first
African American to undergo
gender affirmation surgery.
Biography
From
Pittsburgh, Angianlee was born c. 1927 as Charles Brown.
She joined the Navy in 1950 to be able to receive treatment for rectal and nasal bleeding.
While serving, she was diagnosed at the US Naval Hospital in
Philadelphia for what was described as "a serious mental illness," wanting to be female.
The examinations also led to the discovery of "female glands," showing that Carlett was
intersex.
Opposing the doctor's recommendation to have them surgically removed, Carlett decided instead to seek out a different type of surgery, sex reassignment surgery.
Angianlee began writing to surgeons in
Germany,
Denmark, and
Yugoslavia to see about getting SRS. Dr.
Christian Hamburger
Christian Hamburger (19 February 1904 – 6 October 1992) was a Danish endocrinologist. He worked in Copenhagen and was the doctor responsible for Christine Jorgensen's sex reassignment, and she would choose her name in honor of him.
Career
Ha ...
responded, telling her citizenship was needed to have it done in Denmark.
She wrote to
West Germany’s Minister of Justice Dr. Thomas Dehler and was told the same.
At some point, she arranged to gain citizenship and for the surgery to occur in
Bonn, Germany, starting with hormone and cortisone injections.
Part of her desire to transition stemmed from her desire to marry Sgt. Eugene Martin, who was stationed in Germany at the time.
Claiming a two and a half year relationship with the man, she said that "We’ll be married as soon as I am legally a woman."
Once out of the navy, she moved to
Boston where she made a living by working as a shake dancer and by selling her blood and plasma.
Between June 18 and 25, 1953, Angianlee legally changed her name to Carlett Brown Angianlee, who was stationed in Germany.
She had renounced her American citizenship and planned to sail to Europe on the ''SS Holland'' on August 2.
Once there, she had planned doctors appointments to begin her transition.
About a month later, Agianlee made the decision to postpone the trip in order to undergo a $500 face lift in
New York City from Dr. George J.B. Weiss.
Within the following month, she was ordered not to leave the country by the US government until she had paid $1,200 in back taxes.
To make more money to be able to pay this off, she got a job as a chief at an
Iowa State College fraternity. Nothing beyond this point is known about her, and it is unknown if she ever made it to Europe.
See also
*
Intersex people and military service in the United States
The regulations regarding the service of intersex people in the United States Armed Forces are vague and inconsistent due to the broad nature of humans with intersex conditions. The United States Armed Forces as a whole does not officially ban ...
References
External links
Carlett Brown: The Extreme Marginalization of Transwomen of Color
{{DEFAULTSORT:Angianlee, Carlett Brown
1920s births
20th-century African-American women
20th-century American LGBT people
Former United States citizens
Intersex military personnel
Intersex people and military service in the United States
Intersex women
LGBT African Americans
Possibly living people
American transgender people
Transgender entertainers
Transgender military personnel
Transgender women
Year of birth uncertain