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'''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. The employed a housekeeper and met there on Monday and Friday evenings ina kind of Masonic lodge and called each other "Borther". Many of the working men involved had mt in tavernas and public spacess in Warrington, Manchester and Liverpool.<ref>''Lancaster Gazette'', 20 August 1906.</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==
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[[Category:Clubs]]
[[Category:Clubs]]
[[Category:Cheshire]]
[[Category:Cheshire]]
[[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