Gay neighborhood dc

Essential LGBTQ+ Experiences in Washington, DC

From iconic neighborhoods and historic landmarks to under-the-radar hangouts, discover 12+ ways to celebrate LGBTQ+ culture in the nation&#;s capital.

Washington, DC has not only been the backdrop of historic milestones in gay history – it's home to an LGBTQ+ community that fuels the metropolis with its creativity, innovation and resilience.

 

With the highest percentage of locals identifying as LGBTQ+ of any city in the U.S. (%), DC is one of the most welcoming destinations in the country, offering countless ways to engage with people, places and stories that define the District. 

 

Don't miss our LGBTQ+ arts and history itineraries.

For over 50 years, Pride has brought love, joy and a whole lot of color to the District, featuring a packed month of events created to arouse , empower and connect the Gay community and their allies. Arrange your trip. 
 

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Activists, Washingtonians and visitors from around the country and world hold gathere

The value that places like Pitchers possess cannot be overstated. Although LGBTQ Washingtonians are often comfortable living anywhere in the metropolis, there are only a handful of locations in which people can truly, and openly, show their queer individuality. Indiana Bones is a drag queen based in D.C. Originally from Virginia, Bones was raised in Maryland and has performed in the city for almost four years. For Bones, reflecting on her hold experience coming out in a conservative, Catholic, Latino domesticated, gay bars provide queer people with an inclusive environment that they often lack during their coming out process. “Being here, you get a sigh of relief, you can actually respire in and be like, ‘Oh my God, I am being myself. I am being joyful. I am loving who I am,’” Bones said. The social scene, particularly among gay bars, is heavily diverse. Most establishments, Pitchers included, are not LGBTQ exclusive, and accept straight patronage. KC B. Yoncé, another drag dancer and native Washingtonian, recognized the commercialization of the homosexual nightlife. Although same-sex attracted bars

Does DC Have a Homosexual Neighborhood?

This weekend, the Capital Pride Parade will rally down 14th Street Northwest and through Dupont Circle, the historic queer center of the city. But a lot has changed since the first Celebration in ‘ Does Dupont still serve as the city’s “gayborhood”? And if not, where does?

Logan Circle: Number 9, Trade, and Green Lantern are hefty hitters in the city’s queer club scene. Ed Bailey, the owner of the famous gay nightclub The Town, told Capital Cast DC, “Logan circle certainly is a hub for gay activities. A number of the restaurants and pubs in Logan circle are queer-friendly.”

Barracks Row: Eighth Street Southeast used to be known as “Gay Way” because of the many LGBTQ establishments there in the ‘60s and ‘70s. Many of these were closed due to the AIDS crisis and then gentrification. Now, spots like As You Are and Crazy Aunt Helen’s are working to make it a LGBTQ neighborhood once again.

U Road Corridor: While not historically queer, U Street Northwest now holds the majority of gay nightlife in the city. Bailey says “U Street has get a re

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Dupont Circle NW View on Google Maps
Washington, DC

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Located at the intersection of Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Novel Hampshire Avenues in Northwest Washington, D.C., Dupont Circle has served as the anchor of a neighborhood of diplomats, government officials, war commemorations, and the LGBTQ community for over years. 

Dupont Circle is part of the traditional and ancestral homelands of the Piscataway and Anacostan peoples, who have served as stewards of the region for generations. Washington, D.C., is surrounded by over a dozen tribal nations that thrive along the Anacostia and Potomac River watersheds, Chesapeake Bay area, and the states of Maryland, Virginia, and Delaware. Washington, D.C. sits on the ancestral lands of the Anacostans (also documented as Nacotchtank), and the neighboring Piscataway and Pamunkey peoples. 

Pacific Circle 

When Pierre Charles L'Enfant drew up plans for the City of Washington in , he envisioned a city of grand vistas and diagonal avenues encounter in circles of leafy space. The location that becam