Jump to content

Great Sankey: Difference between revisions

From LGBT History Project
Ross Burgess (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
m Fix bare <references> tag: MW 1.45.1 Cite requires self-closing <references/>
 
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Great Sankey''' is a village in [[Cheshire]], now a suburban area of [[Warrington]].
[[File:Saint Mary's Sankey.jpg|thumb|St Mary's Church]]'''Great Sankey''' is a village in [[Cheshire]], now a suburban area of [[Warrington]].


At the begining of the 19th century, a house in the village was kept as a meeting place for a society of gay men, from various social classes and various aras of north-west England. They employed a housekeeper and met there on Monday and Friday evenings in a kind of Masonic lodge, and called each other "Brother". Many of the working men involved had met in taverns and public spaces in [[Warrington]], [[Manchester]] and [[Liverpool]].<ref>''Lancaster Gazette'', 20 August 1806, quoted in [[H G Cocks]], "Secrets, Crime and Diseases, 1800–1814", Chapter 4 of [[Matt Cook]] (ed) ''[[A Gay History of Britain]]'', pp 117–8</ref>
At the begining of the 19th century, a house in the village was kept as a meeting place for a society of gay men, from various social classes and various aras of north-west England. They employed a housekeeper and met there on Monday and Friday evenings in a kind of Masonic lodge, and called each other "Brother". Many of the working men involved had met in taverns and public spaces in [[Warrington]], [[Manchester]] and [[Liverpool]].<ref>''Lancaster Gazette'', 20 August 1806, quoted in [[H G Cocks]], "Secrets, Crime and Diseases, 1800–1814", Chapter 4 of [[Matt Cook]] (ed) ''[[A Gay History of Britain]]'', pp 117–8</ref>


==References==
==References==
<references>
<references/>


[[Category:Clubs]]
[[Category:Clubs]]
[[Category:Cheshire]]
[[Category:Cheshire]]
[[Category:English villages]]
[[Category:English villages]]

Latest revision as of 13:07, 10 July 2026

St Mary's Church

Great Sankey is a village in Cheshire, now a suburban area of Warrington.

At the begining of the 19th century, a house in the village was kept as a meeting place for a society of gay men, from various social classes and various aras of north-west England. They employed a housekeeper and met there on Monday and Friday evenings in a kind of Masonic lodge, and called each other "Brother". Many of the working men involved had met in taverns and public spaces in Warrington, Manchester and Liverpool.[1]

References

  1. Lancaster Gazette, 20 August 1806, quoted in H G Cocks, "Secrets, Crime and Diseases, 1800–1814", Chapter 4 of Matt Cook (ed) A Gay History of Britain, pp 117–8