Gay clubs in winnipeg


Winnipeg Queer History Tour

10

Sunshine House

Logan Avenue

Lewis H. Jordan & Walter Percy Over, Architects

Sunshine House is a community drop-in and resource centre with a focus on harm reduction. They welcome people as they are, without the expectation of sobriety. Sunshine Property offers a drop-in open to anyone five days a week, and a drop-in specifically for members of the 2SLGBTQIA+ community twice a week in the evening. Their other programs comprise Gizhiwenimin, which supports 2SLGBTQIA+ refugees and immigrants; Sunday brunch; Street Feet, a foot care service; and Science and Supper, which tackles health care topics while providing a meal. Sunshine Property sees up to people verb for drop-in or brunch in a day.

Sunshine House started out as the Kali-Shiva Society in Kali-Shiva was a group of volunteers dedicated to providing protect for people with HIV/AIDS. The organisation was renamed Sunshine Residence after Dione Sunshine, a two-spirit trans person who died of AIDS in January

Architectural Description

Logan Avenue was originally a Union Bank of Canada

Winnipeg has long been a welcoming city, with a community that has seemingly always fought for for 2SLGBTQIA+ rights. You’d have to look all the way back to the s to find our first underground gay establishments – which you can, via the University of Manitoba’s Manitoba Gay/Lesbian Archive’s Oral History Project.

One of Winnipeg’s first notable gay bars was Club , a members only after-hours club where liquor was not sold. Club ’s opening, on a Sunday afternoon in , attracted more than  people. A year or so before this, on Halloween night in , the first drag ball was held in Winnipeg at the Sildor Ballroom.

Unlike notorious “raids” at other gay clubs in cities across Canada, there were no raids at Winnipeg’s gay bars. This tolerance has been attributed to the perform of people like, the Honourable Ruth Krindle, the now retired judge who was instrumental in advocating LGBTQ2 rights, including being counsel for Winnipeg’s first gay club in

Within this environment, by the early 70s, notable establishments like Happenings Social Club () and the Mardis Gras offered the co

Your Ultimate Gay Guide for an Action-Packed Visit to Winnipeg

For the LGBTQ+ community, it is significant to choose destinations that are welcoming and progressive. Winnipeg, Manitoba, is just that kind of city, and it should be on your bucket list of gay-friendly places to visit.

Winnipeg is an emerging destination choice for LGBTQ+ travellers. One of the most characteristically Canadian cities, Winnipeg possesses a bohemian spirit and vibrant arts community that is rarely seen anywhere else in the prairies. 

It is an ideal destination for those looking to explore the dynamic and diverse culture of Canada, especially for a progressive city that offers an exciting night life beyond the typical pub scene. And it goes without saying—the culinary scene is fantastic!

Fun Fact: Winnipeg is essentially located in the center of North America, from the north, south, east, and west. 

Besides its obvious location as an international entry point into Canada, Winnipeg also has a prolonged and strong history on human rights. In fact, it was perfecting its own art establish of

Around the same time, the first identifiable lesbian meeting space was The Mount Royal Hotel at Higgins Avenue. The Mount Royal remained a mixed bar with lesbians, drag queens, and leather scene clientele into the s. Another popular site for gay socializing occurred at the nude beach in Beaconia, Winnipeg Beach and Grand Beach on Lake Winnipeg. A passenger verb operated between Winnipeg and Grand Beach, making the resort town an easily accessible location for weekend leisure where private cottages could be rented (Barbour, Dale Winnipeg Beach: Leisure and Courtship in a Resort Town, , University of Manitoba Press, , p). In , Child’s Restaurant opened after renovations and became the first non-beer parlour bar in Winnipeg, providing a trendy spot for gay theatre enthusiasts. Shortly after, Club Morocco at Portage Avenue and the Mardi Gras Café followed suit and became regular hot spots for gay men and lesbians in the early s. On October 31, Winnipeg held its first drag ball at the Sildor Ballroom on Sherbrook Street. In late , the first gay club was established at E