Because he and all of his siblings were gay men, Bill Hull felt that his sexuality was not unusual. But in the 1950s and 1960s, discretion was vital to southern gay men, he says. Publicly acknowledging one's homosexuality could result in economic recrimination or physical violence. In these excerpts from a 2001 interview, Hull describes his coming-out experience as a teenager and the impact the liberating Chapel Hill atmosphere had on gay males.

Credit text

Hull, Bill. "Interview with Bill Hull." Interview by Chis McGinnis. Chapel Hill, NC and FL, June 21, 2001. The Southern Oral History Program (#4007). University of North Carolina Chapel Hill. Accessed Jan. 23, 2026.

Citation

Hull, Bill. "Interview with Bill Hull." Interview by Chis McGinnis. Chapel Hill, NC and FL, June 21, 2001. The Southern Oral History Program (#4007). University of North Carolina Chapel Hill. Accessed Jan. 23, 2026. From ANCHOR. Library of NC.