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Some locations included here have only the old address number available, because the building had been demolished by the time of the 1931 ordinance. The ordinance creating the change was adopted in October 1931, effective April 1, 1933.
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Note that, in 1931, the City of Portland underwent a massive renumbering of city addresses, with even some street names changing. Special thanks to the Oregon Historical Society, which provided many of the images in this guide, and to the Gay and Lesbian Archives of the Pacific Northwest for its financial support. Hart, transgender novelist and physician, see The Incredible Life and Loves of the Legendary Lucille Hart (1976) and Jonathan Katz’s Gay/Lesbian Almanac (1983).įor additional information about these historic locations and others in Oregon and in the U.S., see: The Queerest Places: A National Guide to Gay and Lesbian Historic Sites (Henry Holt Co., New York, 1997). Tom Cook from a lecture and paper (“Queans, Fruiters and Men of that Kind: The Portland Vice Clique Scandal of 1912”) presented in October 1998 at the Washington State History Museum’s Do Ask, Do Tell: Conference on Outing Pacific Northwest History, Tacoma, WA, as well as continuing research since that date.įor additional information of the life of Dr. Information on the 1912 vice scandal in Portland comes from the research of Mr. of Justice consisting of 800 pages of investigative reports and personal correspondence (all her letters from San Quentin prison were copied for a period of several months) from the National Archives and Records Administration, College Park, Maryland. Federal censuses, and the Marie Equi files from the Dept. For information on sites associated with Marie Equi and Harriet Speckart, we relied on Portland city directories for the years 1906-1920, the 19 U.S. Secondary sources include the first written account of Portland’s gay history in William Holman’s “A Gay History: Lest We Forget,” (The Northwest Gay Review, Special Issue, June 1977), hereinafter referred to simply as “Holman,” and Duane Frye’s account of The Music Hall from the Gay Pride Program of 1993. For more see or guide to historic gay, lesbian, and transgender buildings and locations in Downtown Portland borrows from a number of primary sources, including Minutes of the Portland City Council, Oregon Liquor Control Commission records, Portland city directories, Sanborn fire insurance maps, and several early gay newspapers published in the city between 19 (The Fountain, The NW Fountain, The Northwest Gay Review, and The Cascade Voice). Beautiful and crazy, it’s the kind of city you won’t quickly forget.īritish Airways flows directly from London in Portland, Oregon, from £ 498 return, starting June 3. Its 10,000 rose bushes of around 650 varieties give Portland the nickname of the City of Roses. I puff up a rather steep path to the unexpected International Rose Test Garden, where growers from all over the world send in specimens for cultivation and research. To (try to) remove them, I head to Washington Parka vast downtown forest, crisscrossed by footpaths and cycleways, obscured by huge pine and fir trees.
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Flavors include Viscous Hibiscus and Ring Of Fire (chocolate and chili), but I try the Bacon Maple Bar, a rich, maple cream glazed concoction topped with two slices of bacon. There is a queue around the block and you can also get married here. I try their signature, the unusual Blueberry Bourbon Basil, before I start competing Voodoo donutwhose decor screams “gothic Barbie’s living room,” thanks to neon pink signage and skull and coffin prints. There’s a reason Portland is known as the City of Roses (Photo: Alamy Stock Photo)