Sunday, December 22, 2024

In 1985, a newspaper outed Barry’s HIV status in his regional town. It was the start of years of abuse

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On January 22, 1985, a regional paper in Victoria ran a highly inflammatory headline.

“LOCAL AIDS SUSPECT,” it screamed.

“A young Warrnambool homosexual is the first member of the nursing profession in Australia to be identified as an AIDS suspect,” the story read.

The “suspect” was Barry McCluskey, a 30-year-old student nurse who had just been informed he had contracted HIV.

Somehow, word spread that Barry had received a positive diagnosis for HIV.(Supplied)

He had hoped to keep his diagnosis close to his chest, at least until he figured out how to tell his parents.

But there was no hiding in Warrnambool. Word had gotten out.

“[My parents] had the paper delivered every morning and there it was,” recalls Barry’s brother, Anthony McCluskey.

“There were only a couple of [male] nurses at the hospital so it was pretty easy to work out who it was. My father went to Barry at the time and said to him, ‘Is it true, Barry?’

“And Barry said ‘yes’.”

A ‘tremendous smile’

Barry and his three siblings grew up in Warrnambool, about three hours west of Melbourne, in a small Catholic community.

“We had a really loving family and it was a great childhood we had together. Barry was a very generous man … [with a] tremendous smile,” Anthony says.

“The fact he became a nurse, I think, talks to his caring nature and the kind of person that he was.”

An old photograph of four young people, two women and two men smiling with arms around one another.

Barry (second from left) grew up close with his siblings, Anthony, Mary-Lou and Rosemary.(Supplied)

Barry’s parents knew about and accepted that their son was gay, but Warrnambool was still a small, conservative place.

Except for a secret spot near the breakwater, where men would meet for sex, there was no queer community to speak of.

Barry spent his 20s in Melbourne, then he returned to his hometown to pursue a career in nursing. But everything changed after a trip he took to the US in 1984.

He spent a few months immersed in the gay culture of San Francisco, making friends and enjoying the 80s party scene.

Yet there was an undercurrent of fear. It had been three years since the first reported cases of HIV in the US and case numbers had already reached 130,000 there.

Public hysteria and homophobia were ramping up, with the illness termed “gay cancer” and the “gay plague”.

Old newspapers with headlines including "The Killer Plague", "First case of gay plague hits Melbourne", "Gays bashed over AIDS".

As hysteria ramped up, media outlets featured headlines like, “First case of gay plague hits Melbourne” and “Gays bashed over AIDS”.(Supplied: Australian Lesbian and Gay Archives)

Barry returned to Warrnambool, feeling anxious. He was tested, and received a positive result for HIV.

Panic and prejudice

While the AIDS epidemic was reaching a fever pitch overseas in the mid-80s, it moved more slowly in Australia.

Nonetheless, misinformation was rife and even official health information stirred fear and stigmatised.

Cheryl Durston trained with Barry at the Warrnambool Base Hospital, and remembers the panic that spread through the community in 1985.

“We knew nothing about it, and then suddenly this rumour spread around the hospital: ‘Barry’s got HIV’,” she says.

“It was almost like he was the walking dead.

“The treatment that I saw Barry receive was appalling. 

“It got to a point where Barry was almost ostracised from the hospital. Certain surgeons demanded, ‘He is not to be in our theatre, we do not want him near any of our patients’. And what they said, they got.”

Barry wasn’t unwell, but he was put on sick leave by the hospital.

It was the same year that three-year-old Eve van Grafhorst, who contracted HIV through contaminated blood transfusions, was hounded out of Australia.

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