Difference between revisions of "State Bar"

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== [[Minneapolis/St. Paul, MN: 100 Queer Places in Minnesota History, (1860-2010)]]==
 
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Please note:  I first suspected that Mr. Pesis was a member of organized crime, and that he operated the State purely for profit.  Chester Daxe, who opened [[The Grand Finale]] and the [[Barefoot Boy Health Club]], corrected this mistake via email.  Daxe knew Ernie Pesis personally, and strongly doubts any odious behavior; in fact, Daxe suggested that Ernie was a "straight ally."
 
Please note:  I first suspected that Mr. Pesis was a member of organized crime, and that he operated the State purely for profit.  Chester Daxe, who opened [[The Grand Finale]] and the [[Barefoot Boy Health Club]], corrected this mistake via email.  Daxe knew Ernie Pesis personally, and strongly doubts any odious behavior; in fact, Daxe suggested that Ernie was a "straight ally."
 
Part of [[Minneapolis/St. Paul, MN: 100 Queer Places in Minnesota History, (1860-1969), (1969-2010)]]
 

Latest revision as of 06:31, 2 February 2012

Nicollet Avenue between First and Second Streets, Minneapolis, MN


OPEN ENTRY: This entry is open to collaborative creation by anyone with evidence, citations, and analysis to share, so no particular, named creator is responsible for the accuracy and cogency of its content. Please use this entry's Comment section at the bottom of the page to suggest improvements about which you are unsure. Thanks.

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Pesis examines his unmailed insurance application in a fire-damaged State Bar, 1950. Courtesy of the Minneapolis Star (now Star-Tribune).

In some respects, the State Bar was the last of its kind. Shrouded in mystery and forgotten by most in Minneapolis, the establishment was a hole-in-the wall during the 1940s and 50s in the long-lost Gateway District. Other taverns, such as the Silver Dollar next door, gained substantial newspaper attention for serving alcohol to the “wrong” people.(1) Drunkards, prostitutes, and queer men were all part of this group, as were Native Americans; the Silver Dollar closed briefly in 1947 because it sold alcohol to Native people, which was illegal in Minnesota at the time.(2)


Located across Nicollet Avenue from Gateway Park, The State operated in the oldest part of Minneapolis when aged buildings were tremendously unfashionable.(3) This urban unpopularity is largely the reason why cheap bars concentrated in the transient neighborhood. In the Gateway, owners of the establishments were typically uninterested in their clients beyond the tab.


This may not have been the case at the State, owned by none other than Ernest "Ernie" Pesis—a significant character in the history of Minneapolis’ gay bars. Pesis purchased Sutton’s Place in 1966 and gave it to his nefarious son, Ronnie,(4)who turned the gay bar into a dingy disco purely for the profit.(5) Disrespectability marred the lucrative business of gay bars for all but the most uncaring; locally, this relegated queer bar ownership to the “Jewish Mafia.”(6) Pesis was likely an exception--one can surmise that Pesis allowed queer men to frequent the State based upon his later ownership of Sutton’s Place.

.The Gateway era was a rough period in the history of Minneapolis' gay bars. In July of 1950, a mysterious fire damaged the Sate.



Reporters quickly discovered that the bar was uninsured, and printed Pesis' bad luck: “he said he had written [an application for fire insurance]] and put it in an envelope and then delayed in mailing it.”(7) The State closed after the fire took place.

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Nicollet Avenue between First and Second Streets in 1949. Image courtesy of the Minnesota Historical Society.

This entry is part of:

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



(1)Hart, Joseph and Hirschoff, Edwin C. Down & Out: The Death and Life of Minneapolis' Skid Row. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2002.

(2)Roshiem, David L. The Other Minneapolis: The Rise and Fall of the Gateway, the Old Minneapolis Skid Row. Iowa: Andromeda Press, 1978. Page 164.

(3)Jacobs, Jane. The Death and Life of Great American Cities. New York: Vintage Books, 1961. Chapter 10: "The need for aged buildings." Pages 187-199.

(4)According to an inventory of Minneapolis City directories available on the 4th floor stacks of Hennepin County Central Library.

(5)Tretter, Jean-Nickolaus. Interview with the author and Jacob Gentz, 1/16/10

(6)Carlyle, Erin. "Rommal Bennett's Trial Revisits Spate of Gay Murders in the Twin Cities." City Pages, 4/7/2009. http://www.citypages.com/2009-04-08/news/rommal-bennett-s-trial-revisits-spate-of-gay-murders-in-the-twin-cities/

(7) "Fire in Loop Bar Routs a Dozen Tenants" The Minneapolis Star, 7/16/1950.

Please note: I first suspected that Mr. Pesis was a member of organized crime, and that he operated the State purely for profit. Chester Daxe, who opened The Grand Finale and the Barefoot Boy Health Club, corrected this mistake via email. Daxe knew Ernie Pesis personally, and strongly doubts any odious behavior; in fact, Daxe suggested that Ernie was a "straight ally."