Dishing with Mark n Carrie 6-25-2019 Celebrating Stonewall 50 and World Pride!

Celebrating Stonewall 50 and WorldPride!

This Sunday June 30,2019 is NYC PRIDE and the 5oth Anniversary of Stonewall. For the 1st time ever NYC will also be hosting WORLD PRIDE! Estimates of the crowd started at 4 million and now are over 7+. There is a very large group going from Tampa. Look for TAMPA PRIDE in the Parade space #11. If you are in NYC on Sunday you are welcome to walk with Tampa PRIDE.

https://youtu.be/SIJHExXrNV8

 

June 22, 1969 Judy Garland Died

Judy Garland, the gay icon once called the ‘The Elvis of Homosexuals’, died on June 22 in 1969. Gay mythology long connected her funeral with the Stonewall riots and therefore the birth of the Pride movement. QN Magazine wrote a must read about Judy.

https://qnews.com.au/friends-of-dorothy-judy-garland-died-50-years-ago-today-qn-magazine/

Friends of Dorothy

The Rainbow Flag

The most lasting symbol of the LGBTIQ communities, the Rainbow Flag, was perhaps partly inspired by Garland’s most famous song.

Over the Rainbow speaks to anyone whoever wanted to escape prejudice and persecution with its promise of a place of freedom and happiness.

 

Somewhere over the rainbow

Skies are blue

And the dreams that you dare to dream

Really do come true

https://youtu.be/4wkSBZb2aoI

 

 

Teck Data St. Pete Pride Parade

More Photos below

St Pete Pride Festival

More Photos below

Online Auction

NOT YOUR ORDINARY AUCTION!!! For 28 years we lived in our former home. When moving time came, we took what we truly enjoyed and left everything else. 100’s of you came to our estate sale and we thank you.  The stories we have heard about the sale have had us rolling with laughter. There still was a huge number of things left over so we decided to hire MAXSOLD.com and do an online auction. Racks of costumes, New jewelry, 1,000’s of movie posters, historic pool table, hot tub and the list goes on and on.  The auction goes until July 4,2019 7:30PM Please take a look at the items and I not for you tell a friend.

https://maxsold.maxsold.com/auction/tampa-florida-usa-downsizing-online-auction-w-north-a-street-16709/bidgallery/

 

 

7th Ave Bricks

There is talk about rebricking 7th Ave in Ybor City. The problem is the bricks were given away in the 1960s.  We actually have some of these bricks in our gardens. Read the interesting story by Paul Guzzo Tampa Bay Times

http://www.tampabay.com/tampa/tampa-is-interested-in-re-bricking-seventh-avenue-but-they-cant-find-the-bricks-20190625/?fbclid=IwAR3-2W200BBxq4ygwgIehM_xzIAjJ8XmqNCPFcqX9mX5o_pZ67-r1834C_4

Seventh Avenue in 1965 after the city removed the bricks. Notice Bradley’s on 7th and The Honey Pot in this photo. [Courtesy of the Tampa Bay History Center]

 

Ybor City Cinderella

https://www.facebook.com/events/394331031176462/

You Just Can Not Make This Up!!!

We truly love Miss Amanda D Rhod!!! https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100001213991871 One-night Amanda was between shows at The Honey Pot and stepped outside for some fresh air. Some friends walked by with a Rainbow Puerto Rican Flag. Amanda asked to borrow the flag for a minute. Then walked up to a Police Officer, handed him here cell phone and asked him to take a picture of her. The officer said “Looks like you’re having a fun time partying tonight” Amanda told him no she was working, please take the photo. He did and then took one more with his phone!!! Here is that photo. LOVE AMANDA

Photos of the Week 6-16-19


Family of Edward Sotomayor

@ Rays PRIDE Night

 Photos of the Week

   


  

 

Code words, hiding in plain sight helped gay bars in Tampa endure history of harassment

Local patrons were familiar with the kind of treatment that fueled the riots 50 years ago at Greenwich Village’s Stonewall Inn.
Published June 19
Updated June 19

TAMPA — Mark Bias and Carrie West painted the rails of their pool table in the rainbow colors of the LGBTQ flag.

The colorful makeover honors the table’s history as a feature of Tampa’s first gay bar, the Knotty Pine.

Now, the married Ybor City couple are putting the table up for sale during an online auction Friday as they liquidate belongings they’ve accumulated during their time as leaders of the pride movement in Tampa.

Potential bidders can enter “North A Street” into the search bar at maxsold.com.

“This thing has seen all the changes,” said West, 67, noting that the pool table passed through six gay bars before the couple bought it 20 years ago from the KiKiKi 3 bar. “All these things have.”

ADVERTISEMENT

The auction items span a period of growing acceptance for gay people in American society, he said. Today, communities on both sides of Tampa Bay elect openly gay candidates, and this weekend, they host Pride parades.

“It’s unbelievable how open it is now,” West said.

A gay bar figures prominently in that timeline — Greenwich Village’s Stonewall Inn, where riots broke out 50 years ago when homosexuality was illegal and patrons lashed out against constant raids.

The history of Tampa’s own gay bars mirrors the changes nationwide.

The Knotty Pine opened in the 1940s on the corner of Polk and Morgan streets. When police entered the bar, those dancing would quickly switch from same-sex to opposite-sex partners.

In 1956, 26-year-old Carl DeLong Jr. was found beaten unconscious along Riverhills Drive in Tampa and died a month later. He was last seen alive at the Knotty Pine.

Police used the crime as a pretense to intensify their crackdown.

In July 1957, Tampa’s Jimmie White’s Tavern was raided.

“My orders came from the top,” an officer was quoted as saying in the Tampa Tribune. “We’re going to put a stop to this activity once and for all.”

ADVERTISEMENT

No one was charged, but 12 women dressed in “mannish clothing” were photographed and fingerprinted, according to the Tribune.

The LGBTQ community was also targeted by the John’s Committee established in 1956 by the Florida Legislature to root out what were deemed to be subversive activities. The committee was disbanded in 1965.

In 1993, details of the committee’s efforts were made public. The Tampa Bay Times reported that a local judge cruised gay bars in search of women to extort. They could either perform at a stag party or he would prosecute them.

Still, by the 1970s, gay bars had grown more common, said Manny Alvarez, 56, who in the early-2000s owned the gay-themed Streetcar Charlie’s restaurant in Ybor City.

“Kennedy Boulevard was the gay epicenter,” Alvarez said. “It had The Old Plantation and Rene’s Lounge.”

In Pinellas County, the Lighted Tree and Marilyn’s Closet were popular gay spots and Pass-a-Grille Beach was “very Key Westy gay,” he said.

On Sundays, the Old Plantation House — an upscale alternative to speakeasy-style gay bars — was the place to be, said Bobby Stoner, who was the DJ there.

“It was a very energetic,” said Stoner, 69. “People would come from St. Pete just to dance.”

But harassment continued, said Kim Bachschmid, 65, who in the late-1970s owned Kim’s Magic Fantasy Room in Tampa.

Bachschmid never experience harassment at her bar but police would visit Tampa’s Carousel to check patrons’ underwear, she said, and “if a woman was wearing boxers, she was arrested.”

In the late-1970s, arsonists targeted several Tampa gay bars. But they weren’t hate crimes, West and Bias said. Rather, many believed it was organized crime torching the competition.

One victim was Ybor City’s El Goya.

But the bar reopened on a grander scale, as El Goya Mall — offering five lounges including one with a country-western theme.

“The entrance had a giant lagoon with a huge waterfall,” said Alvarez, the former restaurant owner. “It was legendary.”

El Goya Mall attracted heterosexuals, too. One regular was former Tampa mayor Dick Greco, who would take out-of-town guests there to see the drag shows.

This mainstream status made it the safest place for LGBTQ people to frequent without fear of being outed.

“We parked five blocks away from other bars because we didn’t want to be seen,” Bachschmid said.

Bias and West moved to the area in 1980. Gay bar patrons, they said, whispered the code phrase, “Mrs. Kennedy is in the room,” when anyone spotted undercover cops, and, “Dorothy is on her way,” when a raid was coming.

“Jacqueline Kennedy was so was so pretty and glamorous,” Bias explained, “and, ‘Are you a friend of Dorothy?’ was a gay pickup line.”

Bias and West were regulars at Rene’s, popular for its pool and cabanas. Police would park around the corner and pull over patrons leaving the establishment.

“They asked, ‘Sir, do you know what type of bar that is?'” said Bias, 62.

They replied no, and said they were cousins.

“If we told them the truth we might have been arrested and interrogated,” West said.

In the late-1990s, the couple opened a store selling LGBTQ-themed tchotchkes, art and films in St. Petersburg’s nine-acre Suncoast Resort. The complex was heralded as a gay and lesbian convention center until it closed in 2007.

It was widely believed that police stopped their harassment of gay bars in the 1980s, West and Bias said.

But that’s not true, they said.

They believe it continued into the late-90s — under the guise of narcotics raids.

ADVERTISEMENT

“They weren’t there for drugs,” Bias said. “It was harassment.”

Contact Paul Guzzo at pguzzo@tampabay.com. Follow @PGuzzoTimes.