Difference between revisions of "The Saloon"

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Luck and circumstance ushered the Saloon to 830 Hennepin in the late 1970s, when Ernest Pesis sold Sutton’s Place to “Andy” Anderson and John Moore. The two chose the site—across the street from the [[Adonis/Flick Theater]] at the time—and the saloon theme from a small bar within Sutton’s for their new club.  After paying off thousands in surprise debt and back taxes, they set about investing their profits in the “Y’all Come Back Saloon.”  
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Luck and circumstance ushered the Saloon to 830 Hennepin in the late 1970s, when Ernest Pesis sold Sutton’s Place to “Andy” Anderson and John Moore. The two chose the site—across the street from the [[Adonis/Flick Theaters]] at the time—and the saloon theme from a small bar within Sutton’s for their new club.  After paying off thousands in surprise debt and back taxes, they set about investing their profits in the “Y’all Come Back Saloon.”  
  
  

Revision as of 00:01, 25 February 2010

830 Hennepin Avenue, Minneapolis


One of the most popular sites in Twin Cities LGBT history is, by all accounts, housed in one of the most nondescript buildings on Hennepin Avenue. Built in 1903, 830 Hennepin Avenue predates the small section of 9th street north of Hennepin—its western façade originally bordered another building and was never intended for public view.


Luck and circumstance ushered the Saloon to 830 Hennepin in the late 1970s, when Ernest Pesis sold Sutton’s Place to “Andy” Anderson and John Moore. The two chose the site—across the street from the Adonis/Flick Theaters at the time—and the saloon theme from a small bar within Sutton’s for their new club. After paying off thousands in surprise debt and back taxes, they set about investing their profits in the “Y’all Come Back Saloon.”


The Saloon immediately drew a younger crowd of queer men—this visible draw occasionally encouraged the perpetrators of hate crime violence to attack club goers. On New Year’s Eve, 1981, Rick Hunter waited for his partner John Hanson to pick him up outside of the Saloon after closing time. Hunter observed two young men harassing passersby and, eventually, the two attacked him and his lover on 9th Street. Police quickly entered the scene and, upon a shout from Hanson at his attackers, beat the victims. The attack was a visible addition to years of police brutality—at their trial, Hanson and Hunter were acquitted of wrongdoing. Events such as these inspired better police training and the Queer Street Patrol.


The dance club eventually dropped much of its western décor and became what many called it, simply “The Saloon.” By 1994, Andy and John already boasted “the best light and sound system in the Twin Cities,” and the Saloon’s reputation as a preferred dance space continues to attract queer men and their admirers.


This page is still under construction. -SVC