Gay san fran
San Francisco is packed with homo goodness
San Francisco. SF or SFO. Never San Fran and definitely not Frisco. The gayest town in America, as if you weren’t aware. What you may not comprehend is the secret of San Francisco: Everyone is a little gay. Everyone. Most of the municipality have gotten over the fact that some girls like girls and some boys like boys, sometimes two or three at a time. It’s the live-and-let-live temperament that makes the city so attractive. “Whatever man, it’s cool” should be the urban area motto.
You might be struck by the small size of the city. In its seven miles by seven miles, San Francisco’s residents have etched out more than 100 neighborhoods. While the Castro remains home for the homos, this one neighborhood should not define your life. The whole city is lousy with men, women, and everything in between. Let your gaydar or dykedar adjust to the surroundings and follow the beeps and clicks coming from your loins.
It’s a very walkable and bikeable city. Without the automobile, you’ll find unique small shops and restaurants and enjoy some obscenely evident people-watching. Great food comes with all different price tags, but to detect it, you’ll have to avoid th
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Historical Essay
by Chris Carlsson, 1995
Castro Street Unbiased, 1978
Castro Street Scene 1970s
Photos: Crawford Barton, Gay and Queer woman Historical Society of Northern California
| Many across the Together States consider San Francisco to be a “Gay Mecca” due to its large gay society located primarily in the Castro District as well as the city’s relatively liberal attitude towards sex. Until the 1960’s, though, the Castro was largely a white functional class Irish neighborhood known as “Eureka Valley.” A move came during Society War II, when many soldiers came to San Francisco and formed lgbtq+ relationships. These soldiers then stayed in the city after being discharged for homosexuality. In the 1950s, Beat Identity erupted in San Francisco and notoriously rebelled against middle class values, thus aligning itself with homosexuality and helped bring gay customs to mainstream attention. In the mid to late 1950s, groups such as the Daughters of Bilitis and the Mattachine Society were born, as successfully as the Tavern Guild, which was the first openly gay business association. By 1969, there were 50 homosexual organizations in San Francisco, and by 1973 there were 800. Unfortunately, Vibrant and eclectic, the Castro/Upper Market neighborhood is an internationally famous symbol of gay freedom, a top tourist destination full of stylish shops and popular business spots, and a thriving residential area that thousands of San Franciscans call home. Its streets are filled with lovingly restored Victorian homes, rainbow pride flags, shops offering one-of-a-kind merchandise, heritage streetcars, lively bars and restaurants, and numerous gay-borhood landmarks including Harvey Milk Plaza, the Castro Theatre, Pink Triangle Park and Memorial, and the large SF Female homosexual Gay Bisexual Transgender Community Center. The Castro District, better known as The Castro, is a neighborhood in San Francisco, California, which is also known as Eureka Valley. San Francisco’s gay village is most concentrated in the business district that is located on Castro Street from Market Lane to 19th Street. It extends down Market Street toward Church and on both sides of the Castro neighborhood from Church Street to Eureka Street. Although the greater gay community was, and is, concentrated in the Castro many gay people exist in the surrounding residential areas bordered by the |