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      • Los Angeles has a long history of acceptance and groundbreaking advancements in the LGBTQ+ movement, including the world’s first LGBTQ+ parade in 1970. Along with the vibrant and active LGBTQ+ community, the City of Los Angeles celebrates LGBTQ+ Heritage Month every June.
      www.discoverlosangeles.com/things-to-do/discover-lgbtq-history-in-los-angeles
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  2. A Queer History" sheds light on historical figures who are largely unacknowledged, creating a newfound dialogue about LGBTQ history. L.A.: A Queer History is a local public television...

    • Cooper Do-nuts. Cooper Do-nuts was a 24-hour café popular among the gay, lesbian and trans communities during the 1950s and '60s. Nestled in between two gay bars, the Harold's and the Waldorf, the café was one of few establishments in the city to welcome trans customers at a time when many gay and lesbian bars turned them away in fear of LAPD targeting and persecuting transgender and gender non-conforming Angelenos.
    • The Black Cat Tavern. 1/3 PRIDE (Personal Rights in Defense and Education) led hundreds on Feb 11, 1967 in protest of the riots that occurred when police raided the Black Cat bar in Silver Lake and brutally beat patrons and the bartender. |
    • City of West Hollywood. Before West Hollywood was designated an official city in 1984, the area was an unincorporated region of Los Angeles County, existing outside the jurisdiction of the Los Angeles Police Department.
    • Pershing Square. Pershing Square was a meeting ground for gay men for much of the early 20th century, located at the heart of "The Run" — a circuit of gay-friendly establishments and cruising spots in the 1920s through the '80s.
  3. Feb 9, 2017 · From homes to parks to clubs, here's a map of the 14 most important locations where the LGBT community made space for itself in Los Angeles, often under crisis and in the face of resistance.

  4. The 1969 Stonewall Uprising in New York has been widely regarded as the beginning of the Gay Civil Rights Movement, but the true heart of the movement, and what we know as "Gay Culture" was born in Los Angeles. "L.A.: A Queer History" sheds light on historical figures who are largely unacknowledged, creating a newfound dialogue about LGBTQ ...

  5. DTLA has recently established itself as an up-and-coming queer neighborhood since a handful of queer-owned business and bars opened in 2015, but its queer history is long and storied, including some of the first LGBTQ+ riots in the country at Cooper Do-Nuts in 1959, as well as a collection of gay-friendly hangouts and cruising locales in ...

  6. Jun 22, 2022 · LA: A QUEER HISTORY, a two-part documentary film, uncovers the history of how Los Angeles became the forefront of the LGBTQ+ civil rights movement as activists share their groundbreaking...

  7. Jan 20, 2021 · The Stonewall rebellion is internationally known as a seminal event in LGBT history but L. A. A Queer History posits that Los Angeles is equally important in the struggle for LGBT equality and recognition.