From LGBT History Project
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| '''Lyon's Coventry Street Cornerhouse''' was a respectable, yet affordable, hangout for middle class gay men in London's [[West End]]. It's clientele comprised clerks, shop assistants, workmen, civil servants and the metropolitan intelligentsia. Painted boys could be found in amongst more discreet men.
| | #REDIRECT [[Lyon's Corner House]] |
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| Other clubs and pubs popular with homosexuals at the time were the [[York Minster]], the [[Swiss]] and the [[Marquis of Granby]] in [[Soho]]. [[Peter Wildeblood]] called them "less [than] discreet", rough and cruisy. Throughout the 1930s respectable men in evening dress and camp queans solicited sailors and workmen in the [[Running Horse]]. Other venues included the [[Billie's Club]], the [[Hungry Horse]], [[Gerano's]] in New Compton Street, [[Chez Victor]] in Wardour Street. The downstairs bar at the [[Ritz Hotel]] was frequented by men from high society, nicknamed l’Abri (the shelter), and the [[Trocadero Long Bar]], another [[Lyon's Corner House]].
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| == References ==
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| ''Queer London – Perils and Pleasures in the Sexual Metropolis, 1918-1957'' Matt Houlbrook, The University of Chicago Press, 2005.
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| [[Category:West End]]
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| [[Category:London]]
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| [[Category:Bars]]
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Latest revision as of 11:00, 19 January 2014