Partner Richard Orient

Queer Places:
Columbia University (Ivy League), 116th St and Broadway, New York, NY 10027
Princeton University (Ivy League), 110 West College, Princeton, NJ 08544
Fairview Cemetery, 200 Whitman Ave, West Hartford, CT 06107

Jeffery L. Carples (1950 – December 23, 1994) was a West Hartford native who became a high-ranking New York City social services official and a leader in the national gay rights movement.

Carples attended Sedgwick School and graduated from Conard High School. He moved to New York City in 1973, after receiving a bachelor's degree from Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs.

Carples, who also had a home in Philmont, N.Y., had been in government service for 20 years. He had been vice president of the Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University. He had been chief of staff to center President Joseph Califano Jr., former secretary of health and human services in the Carter administration.

In 1993, in the last days of New York Mayor David Dinkins' administration, Carples was named acting commissioner of the Department of Homeless Services. He had also been chief of staff in the office of the deputy mayor for health and human services; in that job, he was responsible for the daily operation of the offices of homelessness and single-room occupancy housing, children and families, AIDS coordination and managed health care.

From 1990 to 1992, he was executive deputy commissioner for adult services in New York City's Human Resources Administration, administering a budget of $500 million and directing a staff of 6,000.

He held a variety of state and city government jobs.

Carples served on the board of the National Gay Task Force, heading its finance committee.

In 1977, he helped organize the New York Political Action Council, an advocacy group.

To honor his longtime commitment to human services, a child-care center in Greenwich Village (the Jeffrey Carples Child Care Center, 154 Christopher St., New York, NY 10014) was named for Carples, said Donna Lawrence of Family Dynamics, which runs the facility.

He was survived by his companion, Richard Orient of Manhattan.

He died on December 23, 1994, at his home in New York City. He was 44. Carples died of AIDS, his family said.


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  1. Hartford Courant, December 24, 1994 Saturday, STATEWIDE: http://www.columbia.edu/cu/gables/hiv/mem/carples.html