Difference between revisions of "Gay House"

From OutHistory
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 4: Line 4:
  
  
Gay House is a place of genesis for contemporary queer life in Minnesota.  Several organizations began here, including [[OutFront Minnesota]], the [[Twin Cities Pride Festival]], and the [[Lesbian Resource Center]], as did several individuals, including Jack Baker (of [[Baker Law Associates]], Jean-Nickolaus Tretter (of the [[Jean-Nickolaus Tretter Collection]], and Steve Endean—who served on Gay House’s Board of directors before beginning the [[Human Rights Campaign]] in Washington D.C.<small>(1)</small>
+
Gay House is a place of genesis for contemporary queer life in Minnesota.  Several organizations began here, including [[OutFront Minnesota]], the [[Twin Cities Pride Festival]], the [[All God's Children MCC]], and the [[Lesbian Resource Center]], as did several individuals, including Jack Baker (of [[Baker Law Associates]], Jean-Nickolaus Tretter (of the [[Jean-Nickolaus Tretter Collection]], and Steve Endean—who served on Gay House’s Board of directors before beginning the [[Human Rights Campaign]] in Washington D.C.<small>(1)</small>
  
  

Revision as of 12:11, 27 February 2010

216 Ridgewood Avenue, 4th Ave. S and 22nd St., 4419 Nicollet Avenue S. (1971-1979?)


Gay House is a place of genesis for contemporary queer life in Minnesota. Several organizations began here, including OutFront Minnesota, the Twin Cities Pride Festival, the All God's Children MCC, and the Lesbian Resource Center, as did several individuals, including Jack Baker (of Baker Law Associates, Jean-Nickolaus Tretter (of the Jean-Nickolaus Tretter Collection, and Steve Endean—who served on Gay House’s Board of directors before beginning the Human Rights Campaign in Washington D.C.(1)


In 1971, the community center opened in a converted single-family home south of Loring Park; it was one of the first such community spaces in the nation. Gay House was part counseling service, part hippie crash pad, and part library—house members contacted Barbara Gittings (who told Gay house to “keep on gay-ning” (2) ) and publishers of the Advocate for free materials. The library and Gay House staff provided queer Midwesterners of all ages with priceless information. To some, Gay House was simply a halfway house between the vast expanses of homophobic rural America and the promised lands of New York and San Francisco. To others, it was a place to meet other queer people and discuss the successes and failures of living a life outside of heterosexuality.


The discussions (or “rap sessions”) inspired equal amounts of genuine synergy and scandalous infighting—a dissatisfied participant complained “the house was basically run by kids above 18 for kids below 18.”(3) The young pioneers—who considered themselves part of a brotherhood and sisterhood—worked without a model organization long before standards of queer professionalism existed. Thus, meetings occasionally devolved into a series of “loud, angry, and seemingly pointed requests…for participation in some activities.”


(1)Endean, Steve ed. Eaklor, Viki Lynn. Bringing Lesbian and Gay Rights into the Mainstream: Twenty Years of Progress. Binghamton, NY: Haworth Press, 2006. Page 11.

(2)Barbara Gittings Letter, OutFront Minnesota Collection, Box 1. Tretter Collection in GLBt Studies.

(3)“Open House-Meeting at Gayhouse [sic]” Hundred Flowers, 10/1/71. Page 11.

Part of Minneapolis/St. Paul, MN: 100 Queer Places in Minnesota History, (1860-1969), (1969-2010)