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Correct me if I'm wrong, but was there a sling that used to hang inside that place? "Skippers was a cute little hustler bar located where the Four Seasons now stands." - submitted by was a leather/levi neighborhood bar on Cambridge Street. If you want to go to a sex club now, you'll have to drive down to Providence, Rhode Island. It was located on Wareham Street in the South End. The city closed it down, after someone reported illegal activities to the authorities. This place was SCARY!!! The building is being torn down and more luxury condos are going to be in its place.īoston once had a sex club. It was closed a number of years ago and it has since turned into condominiums.Įssex Street, near Chinatown.
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Napoleon's consisted of two piano bars, and a dance floor upstairs, called Josephine's. Once touted as Boston's oldest gentlemen bar, Napoleon Bar was situated in Bay Village on Pinckney Street. It's now "Upstairs at Dedo." Located in Bay Village, across from the Boston Park Plaza. The Loft has been closed for almost ten years now, but now RISE has returned (after a fire that closed the club for over a year) as the after-hours hot spot for gay club-goers. The Loft had three bass-thumping dance floors and a roofdeck. Saturday mornings had a mixed crowd, and Sunday mornings were all-gay. It was Saturdays and Sundays, from 12:30 a.m. This after-hours club was located in the Back Bay (behind Club Cafe). It was a bar for women, and it opened Thursdays through Sundays. and the name has been changed to FELT.Ībove the Howard Johnson's hotel in Kenmore Square stood the Lava Bar. "Haymarket, a short lived, weak attempt at rivaling Avalon in the Combat Zone" - submitted by short-lived bar on Washington Street in Downtown Crossing that featured gay night (Wednesdays). Above the bookstore is the new location of Marquis de Sade, that used to be on Berkeley Street in the South End. I believe the management moved to a new location in the Leather District, on 92A South Street, and renamed the bookstore, Calamus Bookstore. It was located across from the Boston Public Library, on Boylston Street. Okay, it's not a bar or club, but it was perhaps the most popular, longest-surviving gay bookstore in Boston. Click here for more information about the closing. On April 26, 2004, DykeNights held its last night. There was a place for women in Jamaica Plain. I think it thrived back in the early to mid-1980s. Located near Haymarket in downtown Boston. With the 24-hour diners and Chinatown nearby, one would have thought that gay nightlife would thrive.
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It was really never the same when Chaps moved from its Copley location.Ī short-lived dance club on Lincoln Street in the Leather District near South Station. Now, according to many friends, Vapor has slowly emerged into a bi/straight club. Chaps then moved to the Theatre District, and then it changed its name to VAPOR. The alley behind Chaps was the playground during Boston Pride, and the place was packed year after year. It was the best dance club before BUZZ, located in Copley Square, across from the Copley Westin Hotel. What stands in its place is Trinity Place. The Stuart Street location is now Boston's best killer dance club: BUZZ. Shortly after Buddies closed, the bar was then transformed into F/X. It was before my time when Buddies was located in the Back Bay. I remember sneaking in (I was underaged) with friends and had a blast. I only remember Buddies when it was located on Stuart Street in the Theatre District. The dance floor was small, and during the weekend mornings it was a place to have brunch (with omelettes made to order). "The 1270 (it was also known as Quest in the mid- to late-90s) was a great 3 story club with a roof deck at 1270 Boylston,at the other end of the same building where Ramrod is.There is some type of latin flavor breeder's club there now." - submitted by near the Fleet Center (Boston Garden) on Friend Street, near Haymarket and North End. The owners of 119 moved its business toward Downtown Crossing at Pi Alley. for the building is currently being regutted and converted into offices or condos. It was located across the Boston Common on Boylston Street, where now the Four Seasons is located. Not sure what the name was, but I was told there used to be a bar or diner where gay men frequented back in the 70s and 80s. Has this list of former gay bars and hot spots, written by someone much younger than I: Do you remember. | Bin Laden in China » OctoFormer Gay Boston