Tour Overview
Lace up those shoes - and
80 years ago, there was no train beneath us, no rainbow flags hanging from the street lamps. This started as an Irish Catholic neighborhood. In the 1930s and 1940s, what was it like to be gay in San Francisco? Gay people were extremely secretive about their sexual orientation at this time. The consequences of being gay could be jail time, as it was considered a crime. It was also classified as a mental illness, you could be sent to a psychiatric ward. There was electroshock therapy and chemical castration all used as tools for “curing the illness”. San Francisco is now considered one of the gay capitals of the world, but it is important to remember that these activities were happening only a few decades ago.
Stops
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Stop 1: Welcome to the Castro
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Stop 2: Pink Triangle Memorial (2454 Market St)
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Stop 3: Most Holy Redeemer Church (100 Diamond St)
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Stop 4: Metropolitan Community Church (150 Eureka St)
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Stop 5: Alfred E Clark Mansion & History of the Victorians (250 Douglass Street)
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Stop 6: Castro Camera (575 Castro St)
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Stop 7: Harvey’s Bar (500 Castro St)
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Stop 8: Twin Peaks Tavern (401 Castro St)
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Stop 9: Rainbow Flag (Castro St & Market Street)
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Stop 10: Dolores Park (Dolores St &, 19th St)