Tag Archives: gay

Club Carousel – Our Community’s Foundation

The Club Carousel Cabaret is happening in one week, a collaboration of Third Street Theatre and the Calgary Gay History Project.  If you want to attend this event at the HPR on January 30th, look for tickets: here.  Thank you Lisa at Metro and Brad at Beatroute for the recent media coverage.  We are getting pretty excited!

Club Carousel, is Calgary’s first gay bar, and an important milestone in our community’s history – it is where we collectively declared independence for the first time in Calgary from our culture of homophobia, repression and intimidation.

The story begins in 1969 where an unethical entrepreneur operated a basement gay club but would also sell tickets to straights to come down to “look at the queers.”  The gay community eventually boycotted it and decided to start their own club in the same location: the basement of 1207 1st St. SW.   Volunteers worked hard to clean it and get it ready.  There were some private donors who also helped to get it up and running.  They opened in Spring 1970 as Club Carousel – over time they developed their own theme song and newsletter.

Club Carousel Capers Cover

Club Carousel Capers Cover (April 1974) from the Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives (Toronto).

One of the founders, in an interview, said,

“The original name of First Street SW was Scarth Street, but since the name had fallen into relative obscurity and we were attempting to be somewhat discreet, we thought it was a great name to use for our society. The place needed to be totally cleaned up and redone. There was dirt on the floor several inches thick. When we started cleaning it off, we discovered tiles underneath it that we couldn’t even see.

We had a week from the time we acquired the property to our opening night. Everyone involved would come over right after work and spend all night cleaning, painting and building the bar. We hadn’t come up with a name yet. As we were working, we discovered an old can of Carousel brand paint, with a drawing of a carousel horse on the label. And that was it! The Club Carousel was born. Someone painted three similar carousel horses on the wall by the dance floor.”

Club Carousel Wall

One painted wall from the original Club Carousel survives to this day. Photo credit: Del Rath.

The police came that opening weekend and charged the group for operating without a license.  But one officer told them upon departing to get a good lawyer and dropped the name of Harvey Ghitter.  He arranged for the group to apply for a charter to become a Non-Profit Charitable Society, and eventually the Scarth Street Society was formed and would become a donor to a number of local charities in the 1970s.

The University of Calgary’s Queer History

Happy New Year.  2014 promises to be another fruitful year for the Calgary Gay History Project.  Please join us on Thursday, January 16th at the University of Calgary for a lecture and panel discussion on Calgary’s Queer History.

U of C HiverThe lecture from 12:30 – 1:30 PM in the History Department (Room SS623), will uncover the hidden social-cultural past of GLBT people in Calgary’s post-war period.  In the 1950s and 60s, queers were widely deemed to be mentally ill and often treated as criminals by society.  Kevin Allen, from the Calgary Gay History Project, will explore how a growing social and political community with support from key institutions such as the University of Calgary played a strategic role in queer emancipation.  This research presentation is co-sponsored by The Institute for Gender Research and the Department of History.

Check out these previous queer history posts: Harold Call at the U of C (1969); and gay bashing invitation  (1992), to get a taste of how important the U of C was in advancing new frontiers of thought while sometimes clashing with society at large.

After the lecture, there will be an afternoon panel discussion from 2:30-4:30 PM in The Loft (4th Floor, MacEwan Hall) exploring the topic of doing queer history research itself.  Titled, “Doing Queer Public History” the discussion is being co-sponsored by the The Institute for Gender Research and Queers on Campus, and will feature, Kevin Allen from the Calgary Queer History Project, Karen Buckley from the U of C Archives, and Annette Timm, from the U of C Department of History.

Universities, historically, have been centres of liberalization.  Even today, this work continues.  The University of Alberta’s Institute for Sexual Minority Studies and Service put out a job call this week for their new We are Here: Edmonton Queer History Project.  Congratulations to the U of A, we look forward to working closely with them, on our shared Alberta history.

Queer History Project News

It has been all quiet on the website for a bit, so I wanted to give you an update about work that is going on behind the scenes for 2014.

Club Carousel Mascot

Club Carousel Mascot

Firstly, we are working with Third Street Theatre to present the Club Carousel Cabaret, January 30th, as part of the 2014 High Performance Rodeo.  Club Carousel was the first gay owned social club (and drinking place) in Calgary which began in 1968.  It was the dawn of the community as we know it today – and it began while homosexuality was still a criminal offense (decriminalization happened in 1969 – read story: here).  Third Street, Calgary’s Queer Theatre Company has a new show opening this week: UNSEX’d  – check it out!

Secondly, we are specifically researching the University of Calgary’s role in our human rights movement, over the past 45 years.  This will culminate in a new public presentation, January 16th at the U of C’s Institute for Gender Research.  From Noon – 1 PM there will be a public lecture, and from 2-4 PM a panel discussion on queer history in general.

Professor Rebecca Sullivan, pictured here with co-op student Sasha Krioutchkova, has led the relaunch of the Institute for Gender Research. Photo by Riley Brandt

New history posts will begin in January, but as always please contact us, if you have artifacts you would like us to see, or stories you would like to tell!

[KA]