The Little Known Queer History of San Francisco’s Uptown

Photo from the Uptown’s IG page.

Awesome night photo of the Uptown by Ariel Dovas via Flickr

Ma Rainey and the Wildcats Jazz Band, 1923. Ma Rainey was famously arrested for holding a “lesbian party” in Chicago. Bernice Johnson Reagon Collection, Archives Center, National Museum of American History

Harvey Milk Statue at San Francisco City Hall. Photo by Son of Groucho
“He was a true Bohemian. He never wanted anything to change at the Uptown. He would never 86 anyone, or kick anyone out. He refused to change the artwork, which is so bad it has now become great. It took a lot of convincing for him to get rid of the puke-covered couches, or put toilet paper in the ladies’ room <…> He was a brilliant human being, studied English and philosophy at Oxford, a little-known fact. Scott had voluminous knowledge and a sharp mind that he somewhat hid behind drink. He could have a conversation with you about everything, anything”.
Ellsworth also funded Shea’s first business venture. “Scott was very hands-off, he let the employees run the show. I offered a $5 beer-and-a-haircut special, and once cut Warren Hinckle’s hair in the Uptown. It became very popular, and it was completely unsanitary. Hair all over the floor of the bar.” What is much more fun to talk about is owners providing ground for the bartenders to run the show. Clark, who was hired by current managing partner and co-owner Shae Green in 2015, fresh from the Lexington, and took over organizing Uptown Homos said, “I’m a hugely queer person. When it’s your shift it’s your bar. You control the music. You take care of any possible danger. It was good for my vibe on a queer night at a bar that isn’t specifically queer. It’s casual. But still it’s my shift, my bar”. That was also true at the Lexington though that bar had to be far more intense about who would be let in. Started in 1997, by Lila Thirkield because she recognized that there were many bars for gay men but few for queer women, she created a space that served lesbians of all stripes, including those in transition. I, though not fully queer, loved going there. I once witnessed one of the great bartenders throwing out a group of disrespecting straight men who thought they could indulge in…what? An isle of Lesbos in bar form? A field for their domination or exploitation or sheer scavenging? Am I being a bit humorous in this description and perhaps inflammatory? Sure. I will state for posterity that ‘respecting’ men were always allowed in. But what I most importantly understood that night was that I would be safe in that bar. That all those who gathered there would be safe in that bar. I also experienced the amazing queer kinkstress Tina Horn do a performance on the pool table. Though a very brave soul who publicly advocates for rights, Horn was amongst friends that night because she had just been accepted to the graduate program at Sarah Lawrence which means that it wasn’t really a performance but rather an invocation of togetherness in support for the battles ahead.
Photo by Melissa Hawkins via wikicommons