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In December 1983, the New York City Board of Estimates approved the sale of the former Food and Maritime Trades High School, located at 208 West 13th Street, to the Lesbian & Gay Community Services Center, Inc. for $1.5 million.
Callen-Lorde is the only primary care center in New York City created specifically to serve LGBTQ communities. [2] Callen-Lorde's grassroots heritage dates back nearly 50 years to the St. Mark's Community Clinic and the Gay Men's Health Project, [3] two volunteer-based clinics that provided screening and treatment for sexually-transmitted diseases.
Ali Forney Center marchers in 2011. AFC has served homeless LGBTQ youth in New York since 2002. [7] The organization was founded by Carl Siciliano. [3] When AFC first opened, it had only six beds. [8] Siciliano, who knew and respected Forney, recalls that it was a challenge to secure funding for the first two years of the organization's ...
Berkeley — Pacific Center for Human Growth; Los Angeles — Los Angeles LGBT Center; San Diego — The San Diego LGBT Community Center; Oakland — Oakland LGBTQ Community Center; San Francisco — SF LGBT Center; San Francisco — Queer Cultural Center; San Jose — Billy DeFrank Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Community Center
Its location changed four years later to New York, inside the Lesbian and Gay Services Center (now the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Community Center), the address where it remained from 1983 to 1994. The church moved once again in 1994 to its current location at West 36th Street. [5]
In 1989, the trans man Johnny Science formed the first FTM social group in New York City, called F2M Fraternity. [29] Nelson Sullivan was a 1980s videographer who was ubiquitous on Lower Manhattan's art and club scenes during the 1980s. He filmed many 1980s New York LGBT identities as part of documenting his social life.
LGBT (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender) community centers in the United States. Pages in category "LGBTQ community centers in the United States" The following 26 pages are in this category, out of 26 total.
Brooklyn Community Pride Center was the first LGBTQ+ center in Bedford–Stuyvesant, Brooklyn. As of 2020, it remains the only LGBTQ+ center there. [1] [2] Erin Drinkwater served as executive director of the center from 2012 through 2014. [3] During this time, the center moved from its 600-square-foot walk-up quarters to a 1,600 square-foot ...