LGBTQ Culture In Leeds
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LGBT culture in Leeds, England, involves an active community of people who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender/transsexual. A BBC News Online article published in 2012 stated that, while Leeds City Council has not published statistics relating to the number of LGBT residents, the figure can be estimated at 10% of the overall population, which currently suggests a total of at least 77,000. The tenth year of the
Leeds Pride Leeds Pride is an annual LGBT Pride celebration held in the city of Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. History Leeds Pride first took place in August 2006 (then called Leeds Gay Pride) - there had been previous Pride events in Leeds such as ''Hy ...
march and celebration, held in 2016, was attended by over 40,000 people.


History

A comprehensive social history of LGBT communities and culture in Leeds has yet to be compiled, and this was an aim of the ''Queer Stories'' project, a partnership between Yorkshire MESMAC, Leeds Museums and Galleries, and the
West Yorkshire Archive Service West or Occident is one of the four cardinal directions or points of the compass. It is the opposite direction from east and is the direction in which the Sun sets on the Earth. Etymology The word "west" is a Germanic word passed into some ...
. An awareness-raising exhibition curated by the project group was hosted at Leeds City Museum between November 2015 and May 2016, and included a mixture of objects and testimonies. With funding from the National Lottery Heritage Fund, the project grew into ''West Yorkshire Queer Stories'', which went on to collect 200 oral history interviews from LGBT people in the region between 2018 and 2020. These are available on the project's website.


Pre-1970

Pubs and bars catering to LGBT customers have traditionally centred around
The Calls The Calls is an area and street by the River Aire in Leeds city centre, West Yorkshire, England. This district falls within the City and Hunslet ward of the City of Leeds Council. Formerly an area of industry in Leeds, it has now been regene ...
and Lower Briggate, an area sometimes referred to a
Leeds Gay Quarter#gayleeds
Leeds' gay village or Freedom Quarter. In the 1930s, the Pelican Social Club in Blayd’s Yard, off Lower Briggate, was reportedly "frequented by effeminate men who called each other by female Christian names and two of whom wore women’s clothing". The Mitre pub on Commercial Street (formerly the Horse and Jockey, dating back to 1744) welcomed gay male customers in the evenings throughout the 1950s, and was also regularly visited by sympathetic police officers before closing in 1961. The Royal Hotel, off Lower Briggate, was another gay-friendly venue during the 1960s. The city's longest-running gay pub is
The New Penny The New Penny is a gay pub in The Calls area of Leeds, West Yorkshire. It is reported to be the oldest continually running gay pub in the UK. History The pub started as the Hope and Anchor in 1953. Although difficulty with the law meant it w ...
, formerly known as the Hope and Anchor, which has "provided a safe venue for the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Trans* community" since 1953, according to the
blue plaque A blue plaque is a permanent sign installed in a public place in the United Kingdom and elsewhere to commemorate a link between that location and a famous person, event, or former building on the site, serving as a historical marker. The term i ...
placed there by Leeds Civic Trust in 2016. In March 1968, following the UK's decriminalisation of homosexual acts, the Hope and Anchor was featured in an exposé-style article in the local ''Union News'', which paid particular attention to the behaviour and habits of its gay clientele: The piece also described Saturday as "the big night of the week" and reported that couples tended to move on to coffee bars after the pub's closing time, where they would remain until around 1 a.m. The pub was targeted and "completely wrecked" by football fans following the Leeds United v. Glasgow Rangers match at
Elland Road Elland Road is a football stadium in Beeston, Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, which has been the home of Premier League club Leeds United since the club's formation in 1919. The stadium is the 14th largest football stadium in England. The g ...
on 9 April 1968. A period of closure followed, after which it reopened as The New Penny.


1970s-1990s

The activities of Leeds-based gay rights organisations have been reported in newspapers as far back as 1971. The University of Leeds branch of the national Gay Liberation Front, known as the Gay Liberation Society, distributed leaflets at events saying "there is nothing wrong in loving people of the same sex". The group was also photographed demonstrating in solidarity with the people of Northern Ireland, following the events of Bloody Sunday (1972). Its headquarters, which opened on Woodhouse Lane in December 1972, were ransacked within weeks: a member reported to the ''Yorkshire Evening Post'' that a window was smashed, books were ripped, and decorations torn down. While the wider Gay Liberation Front movement disbanded in 1974, the Leeds society continued for several more years. Existing gay pubs remained in business throughout the 1970s, while the White Hart in nearby Pool-in-Wharfedale offered a countryside escape for older gay men seeking meals and companionship on Sunday afternoons and evenings. In March 1974, the University of Leeds hosted what was billed as the country's first national conference for transvestite and transsexual people. Titled '' Transvestism and Transsexualism in Modern Society'', it attracted 102 attendees and included talks and a screening of the 1968 documentary '' The Queen'', filmed on New York's underground drag scene. A young records clerk at Leeds General Infirmary, Paul Furness, first brought the World Health Organization's classification of
homosexuality as a disease Homosexuality is Romance (love), romantic attraction, sexual attraction, or Human sexual activity, sexual behavior between members of the same sex or gender. As a sexual orientation, homosexuality is "an enduring pattern of emotional, romant ...
to the attention of Tom Robinson of the Tom Robinson Band in 1978. The singer made many references to this fact during concerts and included the classification number 302.0 on the sleeve of the ''Rising Free'' EP, which included the song " Glad to Be Gay". Gay women received support from the Leeds Lesbian Line, a telephone switchboard that opened in May 1982. By the time of its first anniversary, it was being staffed by six women and was available for two hours on Tuesday evenings, receiving on average six calls a night. The 1980s saw a proliferation of LGBT-friendly pubs and nightclubs in Leeds, including The Bridge Inn (on Bridge End); Ye Old Red Lion (at the corner of Meadow Lane/Hunslet Road); Charlie's Club and Bananas Bar (in Lambert's Yard/Queens Court); and Rockshots 2 (on Lower Briggate). These were joined in the 1990s by Primo's and Primo's II (New York Street/Back New York Street); Queens Court, which replaced Charlie's Club; Bar Fibre (Lower Briggate); and Blayd's Bar (in Blayds Yard), which was popular with lesbians. Gay-friendly club nights also became popular in the 1990s. Running from 1993 to 1996, Vague was a "mixed" (i.e. gay and straight) night at Leeds nightclub The Warehouse. It was followed by SpeedQueen, which began at The Warehouse, before moving to Stinky's Peephouse, where its Saturday night gatherings attracted 350 clubbers each week and featured an outdoor terrace and giant bed. In 2003, SpeedQueen returned to The Warehouse, but moved again to Gatecrasher, and to Mint Warehouse in 2016. Both Vague and SpeedQueen "blended a kitsch theme with an artistic underbelly which saw clubbers return to some of the outlandish costumes which characterised the late 70s", according to ''Yorkshire Evening Post'' journalist Rod McPhee.


Post-2000

Leeds saw one of the country's very first civil partnerships, which took place at 8 a.m. on 21 December 2005, between entrepreneur Terry George and Michael Rothwell. The couple signed the register at Bar Fibre on Lower Briggate after being granted a special licence. The first Leeds Gay Pride was held on 6 August 2006, and saw a parade and open-topped pink bus make their way through the streets of the city centre. Taking place every year since, the event has grown to involve many local businesses and increasing numbers of attendees, reported at over 40,000 in 2016. In the same year, its contribution to the city's economy was calculated at over £3 million. LGBT students at the city's universities continue to be politically active. In March 2017, they rallied in Victoria Gardens against gay concentration camps in Chechnya. Female students organized a "women-centric queer dance party" called ''Scissors'' at Leeds University Union in January 2017. The publicity stated: "It’s no secret that too often the LGBTQ+ scene focuses on white, gay, slim, and able-bodied men; we aim to offset this balance creating a space where everyone can feel free to be themselves and dance." On 26 September 2018, The Hyde Park Book Club, a venue in
Hyde Park, Leeds Hyde Park is an inner-city residential area of north-west Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, situated between the University of Leeds and Headingley. It sits in the Headingley and Hyde Park ward of Leeds City Council. The area is in the centr ...
, held an event called ''LGBTQ The Music 2'', presented by ''Come Play With Me'', celebrating LGBTQ+ people in music. In January 2019, Leeds-based brewer
Anthology
created a new beer to celebrate LGBT History Month, with 10p from every pint donated to Stonewall.


Leeds Freedom Bridge

Plans to repaint the railway bridge over Lower Briggate in rainbow colours, reflecting the design of the
LGBT pride flag The rainbow flag, also known as the (gay) pride flag, is a symbol of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) pride and LGBT social movements. The colors reflect the diversity of the LGBT community and the spectrum of human sexuality an ...
, were announced in September 2016 by LGBT activist and Leeds campaigne
Thomas Wales
after the project had remained in the LGBT political wilderness for years. Work was completed by Network Rail in February 2017 and Councillor Jonathan Pryor said, "This bridge represents a tremendous show of support for the city’s LGBT community. Not only will the
Leeds Freedom Bridge The Leeds Freedom Bridge is a railway bridge (HUL4/53) that crosses over the area known as gayleeds on Briggate, Lower Briggate in Leeds, West Yorkshire. This area is also where an annual LBGT parade Leeds Pride finishes, the bridge is now painte ...
be an eye-catching addition ... it will also make a huge statement to our many visitors. We embrace and celebrate diversity and the contribution it makes to ensuring Leeds is such a warm, welcoming and successful city". The term Freedom Bridge was coined by fellow LGBT campaigner and community website edito
Ross McCusker
who took inspiration from San Francisco artist Gilbert Baker's Freedom Flag.


Recreation

The tourist information service Visit Leeds promotes LGBT tourism, including nightlife, and produces a Leeds LGBT* Map. Among the LGBT-friendly venues it lists in the city centre are The Viaduct Showbar, The New Penny, Blayd’s Bar, Wharf Chambers, Tunnel, The Bridge, Queens Court and Bar Fibre. The latter two co-host popular Bank Holiday 'Courtyard Parties' during the summer. LGBT-inclusive sports clubs are numerous in Leeds. The athletics club Leeds FrontRunners describes itself as "an all-inclusive club, welcoming anyone who identifies as LGBT*, their friends and even people who just love running and are happy to look beyond labels". The Yorkshire Terriers Football Club was one of the first gay-friendly teams to be established in the UK. Leeds Hunters Rugby is an inclusive rugby club which aims to provide a safe environment for any adult male to play Rugby Union irrespective of race, sexual orientation, ethnicity and level of fitness or experience, and any person over the age of 18 to access touch rugby. The club was established in 2016 and train in North Leeds. Marching Out Together is the Leeds United FC supporters group for LGBTQ fans; they were officially endorsed by the club in 2017. Leeds has its own Queer Film Festival, which first took place in 2005, then 2010, and annually since 2013. As well as screening films such as '' The Watermelon Woman'' and '' Set It Off'', the event has included talks, zine-making and letter-writing workshops. The gay lifestyle magazine ''Bent'' was published in Leeds. The LGBT community website #gayyorkshire is based in Leeds and helps to promote the Leeds LGBT night-time economy, organisations and events as well as providing other LGBT information from across the wider county of Yorkshire.


Notable LGBT people from Leeds

* Nicola Adams, professional boxer. * Marc Almond, vocalist of Soft Cell. * Alan Bennett, writer and actor. * Jack Birkett, dancer and performer. * Thomas Wales, LGBT activist and Leeds Freedom Bridge campaigner. * Terry George, entrepreneur. *
Robert Hawthorn Kitson Robert Hawthorn Kitson (3 July 1873 — 17 September 1947) was a British painter. As a gay man, he chose to leave England, where the Labouchere Amendment made life difficult. He settled in Sicily, where he built a villa in Taormina, Casa Cuseni, ...
, artist. *
Cyril Livingstone Cyril Livingstone (28 March 1921 – 31 March 2011) was an English Leeds based theatre director, actor, critic and couturier. Early life Cyril Livingstone was born on 28 March 1921, he was the youngest of three brothers born to Joseph and Bert ...
, theatre actor, director, critic and couturier, commemorated in a Rainbow Plaque *
Mark Michalowski Mark Michalowski (born 1963 in Chesterfield) is the editor of ''Shout!'', "Yorkshire's lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender paper", as well as being an author best known for his work writing spin-offs based on the BBC Television series ''Doctor ...
, author and founder of ''Shout!'' magazine. * Angela Morley, composer and conductor. *
Anthony Morley Anthony Morley (born 1972) is an English former model and convicted murderer. He won the first Mr Gay UK contest in 1993. In 2008 he was imprisoned for the killing, dismemberment and partial cannibalisation of his lover, magazine executive Da ...
, the first
Mr Gay UK Mr Gay UK is a British annual beauty contest for gay men, with regional heats held in gay nightclubs with a grand final usually at a gay venue. It began in 1982 as "Mr Hardware" (named after a fragrance) designed to promote a gay mail order c ...
and a convicted murderer. *
John Riley (poet) John Riley (1937–1978) was a poet who was associated with the British Poetry Revival. Riley was born and grew up in Leeds. He served in the Royal Air Force from 1956 to 1958 and then attended Pembroke College, Cambridge, graduating in 1961. He t ...
* Sophie Wilson, computer scientist.


LGBT links with Leeds

The banker and MP Ernest Beckett, 2nd Baron Grimthorpe, who resided at Kirkstall Grange, Headingley, in the latter half of the nineteenth century, is believed to have been the father of Violet Trefusis, who is remembered for a same-sex affair with the poet Vita Sackville-West. Their relationship was documented in a series of passionate letters between 1912 and 1922.


References

{{LGBT topics in the United Kingdom Culture in Leeds Leeds