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LGBT culture in Philadelphia


The development of LGBT culture in Philadelphia can be traced back to the early 20th century. It exists in current times as a dynamic and diverse culture with establishments and events held to promote LGBT culture and rights.

The Philadelphia LGBT community has roots as far back as the 1930s and '40s. Early gay networks would meet privately at underground house parties and other private venues within Center City, West Philadelphia, and Germantown. The post-WWII Center City area provided plentiful housing and urban anonymity that allowed the LGBT culture to meet hidden from public view.

By the 1950s, a jazz, espresso, and beatnik culture was stirring things up around Rittenhouse Square and in coffee houses on Sansom Street, creating a niche for the city's gay community. The LGBT culture developing in Philadelphia invoked the first article published in America that recognizes a city's gay community and political scene titled "The Furtive Fraternity" published in Greater Philadelphia. The article describes political limitations the emerging gay community faced.

Gay rights demonstrations were held at Independence Hall from 1965-1969 which marked the start of a new era for Philadelphia gay culture, as well as the district of Washington Square West. The protesters marched on 4 July 1965 and continued for years following. "Reminder Day, " as it was called, was held publicly to acknowledge the inequality of rights for gay men and lesbians under the US Constitution at the time. The LGBT rights movement was gaining speed in Philadelphia along with other LGBT actions prior to the Stonewall riots in New York City four years later.

Washington Square West, sometimes called Midtown Village, is referred to by locals as "the Gayborhood." Since the 1920s this area was a mecca for fashion and entertainment. During the 1960s a transition from high-end stage performances and chorus lines into cheap adult entertainment took place. "Musical bars" on Camac and Quince Streets hosted gay and lesbian clientele but required a fee to mob connections for law enforcement to look the other way. The preservation of these bars around 13th and Locust Streets, through dealings with the mob, made gay culture appear more closely tied to illegal activity, which drew attention from the authorities. The lumping together of prostitutes, drug dealers, and homosexuals provoked police raids on gay bars up into the early 1980s. During this time, demonstrations at Independence Hall for gay rights sought to raise the community from an underground and lascivious group into a more unified community and political entity. This same area of the city remains an epicenter for gay culture today.


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