Feb 03 2025 66 mins 5
In previous episodes, we discussed how gay men often found refuge in mafia-owned private bottle clubs, where they could drink and socialize without the fear of police raids or public hostility. These underground venues, while risky due to their illegal nature, offered a rare safe haven where gay men could express themselves more freely and form a sense of community away from the prying eyes of a largely unwelcoming society.
In this episode, crime writer Chris Holcombe joins us to discuss how gay speakeasies emerged during the Prohibition era as secretive, underground venues where LGBTQ+ individuals could gather away from the scrutiny and persecution of mainstream society.
Related Episodes:
- Listen to Episode 17. Mobsters & Mos: How the Mafia Owned Gay Nightlife
- Listen to Episode 63. The Stonewall Riots
Additional Resources:
- Learn More About Chris Holcombe
- Follow Chris on Instagram
- Support Chris on Patreon
- Order the Hidden Gotham Series
- Subscribe to Chris’s Monthly Emails
- Gay New York: Gender, Urban Culture, and the Making of the Gay Male World, 1890-1940
- Bulldaggers, Pansies, and Chocolate Babies
- Three Plays: Sex / The Drag / The Pleasure Man
- The Speakeasy Glossary – Queer Slang of the Prohibition Era