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Manchester LGBT Heritage Trail

From LGBT History Project
Revision as of 19:04, 23 October 2012 by Ross Burgess (talk | contribs)

The Manchester LGBT Heritage Trail, also called the Out in the Past Trail, is a series of guided walks round the city visiting sites of importance for gay history.

The trail is marked by rainbow flag paving stones, which were inaugurated by the City Council in 2005[1] and funded by a grant of £39,500 from the Heritage Lottery Fund.[2] They were designed by local mocaic artist Mark Kennedy.

In 2007 it was described as of Manchester’s most popular official guided walk.[3]

Stopping places on the trail are:[4][5]

  1. The New Union and Manto
  2. Alan Turing Memorial and Beacon of Hope
  3. The Rembrandt Hotel
  4. The Village
  5. Minshull Street Courts
  6. Site of Grassroots book shop
  7. former premises of Manchester Labour Press Society, one of whose directors was Edward Carpenter
  8. site of a drag ball raided by the police in 1880
  9. Church House, where the North-Western Homosexual Law Reform Committee was inaugurated in 1964
  10. The Stuffed Olive and Heroes
  11. The New Bailey Prison
  12. Cumberland Street, where a gay couple lived in the 19th century
  13. The John Rylands Library
  14. Manchester Town Hall
  15. The Café Royal
  16. Manchester Art Gallery
  17. The Gaumont Cinema and the Snakepit
  18. The Rochdale Canal

References

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