He saw something others did not.
Jean-Nickolaus Tretter stashed away posters. He assembled pamphlets and periodicals, sought buttons from events, T-shirts from softball teams. He even made the case for collecting candy tossed by drag queens at the Pride Parade.
When few people saw value in gay history, Tretter sought to preserve it.
Tretter, who died in December at age 76, spent decades amassing one of the nation's largest collections of LGBTQ material, now housed at the University of Minnesota's Elmer L. Andersen Library. His friends, family and admirers gathered Friday in the building that contains documents from a past he fought to save.
"He once said to me that 'If we don't preserve our history, if we don't write our history, they will write it for us. And if they write it, it'll be a lie,' " said James Garlough, his friend of 25 years. "He stood on the front lines of the LGBTQIA rights movement in Minnesota from the beginning."
The crowd celebrated Tretter's life on the first day of the Twin Cities Pride Festival. Tretter was an organizer of the first Twin Cities Pride event in 1972, and Garlough said one of his friend's favorite things in life was to "hold court" at Pride's History Pavilion, spending hours telling young LGBTQ people about their shared history.
Friends and curators of the library's Tretter Collection described a man whose enthusiasm for collecting fell somewhere between visionary archivist and compulsive hoarder.
The library's collection includes millions of printed pages, thousands of buttons and more than a thousand T-shirts, curator Aiden Bettine said. There is material collected from around the world, including items in about 60 languages. But much of it centers on LGBTQ history in the Midwest and the Twin Cities.