According to Lyon, lots of gay bars closed to make way for Nationals Park or have become entirely new establishments, but he can’t think of any gay bars that turned hetero. Daniel) Library, Clubs and Equality: Fighting Discrimination at Philadelphias Gay Bars in the 1970s and. Denny Lyon, director of operations at Nellie’s, has been working in D.C. bars and restaurants catering to a gay clientele can be found though the. Henry’s didn’t market itself as a gay establishment (never a cruise bar, he says) but it’s always been known as gay-friendly and still counts 25 to 30 percent of its patrons as gay.Īs for gay bars that go straight, we have yet to hear of one. Gay DC F or a smallish East Coast city, Washington, DC's gay and lesbian. According to Alvin Ross, the restaurant’s current owner and an employee since 1969, Henry Yaffe bought the place (originally a country/western bar) in 1966 and set out to capture three audiences: the real estate crowd (Yaffe restored houses on the Hill in addition to being a hairdresser), Evening Star reporters (who worked a few blocks away), and gay folks (Yaffe was gay). Henry’s on the Hill is a bit more nuanced-not gay per se, but expressly gay-friendly for more than 50 years. As You Are Bar, Washington, DC Babes of Carytown. The most popular gay club of Johannesburg was The Dungeon, which attracted females as well as males, and lasted until the 1990s. The decade of the 1970s was when urban gay clubs took root. The Fireplace in Dupont Circle originally opened as a female strip club in the 1950s, but it’s been a gay spot for at least the past 40 years. A gay bar is a drinking establishment that caters to an exclusively or predominantly lesbian, gay. Others have long histories with gay clientele, even if they didn’t start out that way. Those bars that existed were usually owned by the mafia, who circumvented the law by creating alternative branding. Though the location has operated as a hetero comedy club, a barbecue restaurant, and a Korean karaoke bar since the 1970s, the Green Lantern returned it to its roots when it opened as a gay bar in 1991. 3 Green Court, and served as a rendezvous spot for D.C.’s early gay community. In the early 20th century, a speakeasy treehouse called Krazy Kat Klub operated right across from the present-day Green Lantern, at what was then No. According to Greg Zehnacker, the bar’s owner and operator, the building and alleyway near 14th Street NW have hosted gay bars on and off since the 1900s.
The Green Lantern didn’t open until 1991, but the alley it sits in has always been gay.