Atlantic City, New Jersey has a long association with the LGBT community, particular in the areas of nightlife and drag performance.[1]
Background
edit"From its earliest days" in the late 19th century, "Atlantic City's climate of relative sexual freedom attracted gay white tourists to town."[2] Former Ziegfeld girl Louise Mack opened the Entertainers Club in the 1920s, which has been described as the oldest gay bar on the East Coast.[3] Drag shows were something of a craze in the city during the early 1930s. Some consider the massive influx of military recruits to the city during the war at the Atlantic City Training Center to have jumpstarted the gay nightlife in the city.
Young servicemen and women, newly freed from the constraints of narrow-minded small towns and seeking same-sex companionship, were eager to explore places like the Entertainers Club. New York Avenue establishments with drag shows became popular. Gay and lesbian-friendly guesthouses opened in the city.
In 1942, as the military occupied many of the city's hotels, it became something of a "militarized resort." A crackdown on vice activities ensued, with particular focus on female impersonators. This led to a ban on "female impersonators" in local entertainment venues during that period. The Atlantic City police chief declared, "Female impersonators as entertainers are no longer allowed to appear in local entertainment venues."[4]
At midcentury, police regularly arrested cross-dressers and drag queens.[5] Numerous Atlantic City nightlife venues were fined or otherwise persecuted for hosting guests who "appeared" to be homosexual and "female impersonators" by the state alcohol enforcement authority at mid-century.[6]
Rainbow Beach
editThe beach in front of the Claridge Hotel in Atlantic City has been known as a "gay beach" for decades, some say chosen due to the phallic shape of the peak at the top of the hotel against the skyline.[7][8] In 2022, Park Place Beach in front of the Claridge was officially rededicated with a painted entry as Rainbow Beach.[9][10][11]
New York Avenue and Snake Alley
editAtlantic City's New York Avenue and what is now Schultz-Hill Boulevard was once known as a bustling mid-century and late 20th-century gay neighborhood and nightlife district.[12][13] Gay venues like the Saratoga Club (now the site of Cardinal at 201 S. New York Ave), the Chez (now the site of Anchor Rock Club), the Rendezvous, the underground club Pukalani and the Chester Inn contributed to the culture and nightlife of the area, and a variety of breakfast spots, cafés and restaurants were frequented by the gay community.[14][15][16][17][3][18]
The area peaked with a large number of gay establishments in the 1970s, in the era between the legalization of serving "apparent homosexuals" in New Jersey drinking establishments by the New Jersey Supreme Court in the One Eleven Wines case (brought by, among others, the owners of AC gay bar Val's) and the beginning of the casino era in 1978.[19]
White middle-class tourism to the city had drastically declined between 1950 and 1970, allowing the gay community to flourish without harassment over tourism concerns.[20]
By the mid-to-early 1980s, however, the presence of the casinos, which tended to disincentivize a walkable city environment, had caused the teardown of many of the old establishments on New York Avenue.[20] Land speculation in the hopes of casino buy-outs of parcels led to disinvestment in independent and small-scale rooming houses, restaurants and gay nightlife venues walkable to the beach. Many of the staff and performers on the gay scene moved to the better-paying casinos.[21] The AIDS epidemic additionally decimated the community in the 1980s and early 1990s, and independent bars, clubs and rooming houses could not compete with the comped freebies at the casinos.
Schultz-Hill Boulevard
editSchultz-Hill Boulevard was formerly known as Snake Alley or Westminster Alley but was renamed in 2023 to honor former nightclub owner John Schultz and Gary Hill, the couple who established the Schultz-Hill Foundation for South Jersey performing and visual arts and other community services.[22][23]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Columnist, By Monica Yant Kinney, Inquirer. "Shore's damage reaches dressmaker to A.C. drag queens". The Philadelphia Inquirer.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Simon, Bryant. "New York Avenue: the life and death of gay spaces in Atlantic City, New Jersey, 1920-1990." Journal of Urban History 28.3 (2002): 300-327.
- ^ a b Waltzer, Jim (January 22, 2009). "Creatures of the Night". Atlantic City Weekly.
- ^ Allan Bérubé. Coming Out Under Fire: The History of Gay Men and Women in World War II. United States, University of North Carolina Press, 2010 at p. 123.
- ^ B. Simon (2002)
- ^ Husted, H. (2021-06-02). "New Jersey LGBT Bars 1930s-1960s in ABC Bulletins". New Jersey State Library. Retrieved 2023-11-03.
- ^ Writer, By Amy S. Rosenberg, Staff (June 16, 2014). "Atlantic City ramps up its LGBT marketing". The Philadelphia Inquirer.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Greene, Laurie (2020-12-18). Drag Queens and Beauty Queens: Contesting Femininity in the World's Playground. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-1-9788-1386-1.
- ^ "Pride Day At Rainbow Beach at Park Place Beach in Atlantic City". Out In Jersey. November 2, 2023.
- ^ Writer, SELENA VAZQUEZ Staff (August 23, 2023). "Atlantic City hosts first Rainbow Beach Bash". Press of Atlantic City.
- ^ "Why Lesbians Are Flocking to New Jersey Shore". www.outtraveler.com.
- ^ "Laurieagreene". Retrieved 2023-11-03.
- ^ "Easily Offended? Get Out Now! at Anchor Rock Club in Atlantic City". Out In Jersey. 2023-11-02. Retrieved 2023-11-03.
- ^ Vazquez, Selena (June 18, 2023). "Atlantic City was once famous for its gay bars. Now, it has none". Press of Atlantic City.
- ^ Laurie Greene. Drag Queens and Beauty Queens: Contesting Femininity in the World's Playground (December 18, 2020)
- ^ Spreng, Mortimer (May 25, 2023). "We all miss New York Avenue in AC". Out In Jersey.
- ^ "Ted Larson Collection - Danny Windsor's Funtastiks". www.queermusicheritage.com.
- ^ Vazquez, Selena (October 6, 2023). "'Snake Alley' no more". Press of Atlantic City.
- ^ Strub, Whitney; Stewart-Winter, Timothy (November 30, 2017). "Remembering One Eleven Wines, a Pre-Stonewall Win Against Homophobic State Surveillance" – via slate.com.
- ^ a b Simon (2002)
- ^ "This Atlantic City showgirl has always brought his full humanity to work".
- ^ Writer, SELENA VAZQUEZ Staff (October 5, 2023). "Atlantic City's Westminster Ave renamed Schultz-Hill Boulevard". Press of Atlantic City.
- ^ Schweibert, Ray (August 17, 2011). "Brass Rail Is Back". Atlantic City Weekly.