This historical work chronicles the emergence of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgendered, and queer (LGBTQ) student visibility at the University of Florida from 1970 to 1982. It focuses on the establishment of an LGBTQ student group and student reactions to queer visibility. This work relies heavily on the student newspaper for the student perspective, and shows how the emergence of queer students was part of the expansion of student affairs offices and how queer student movements grew from other social protest movements. Higher education history has almost entirely omitted queer experiences, and queer history has not looked deeply into higher education. Student activism on college campuses has a long and storied history, typically associated with civil rights and the Black power movement for African Americans, antiwar protests, feminism, and environmentalism. Queer activism emerged in the 1970s, both on campuses and off. Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer people were speaking and acting out for their right to be visible and out of the closet (Beemyn 2003;Blount 2005;D'Emilio 1983;Suran 2001). As historian Karen Graves has shown, Florida is significant to queer history because of its unique experiences with state-sanctioned persecution of queer people (Graves 2009).