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  • Axios San Francisco

    San Francisco announces new site for nation's first LGBTQ history museum

    By Shawna Chen,

    23 days ago

    The nation's first LGBTQ history museum has set its sights on a new home.

    Why it matters: The move is part of a $17.5 million project aimed at helping the GLBT Historical Society Museum and Archives — sometimes referred to as the " queer Smithsonian " — build on its collection at a permanent location.


    Driving the news: Mayor London Breed and Supervisor Rafael Mandelman will introduce legislation next Tuesday that would allow the city to purchase 2280 Market St. with the goal of helping the museum become a full-scale research center.

    • The new site, located next to the newly renovated Fisch & Flore restaurant, features a two-story building with 22,330 square feet of space.
    • The museum plans to explore a timeline for moving into the ground floor as tenant leases expire over the next few years. Its current location at 4127 18th St. is one level.

    Follow the money: Breed allocated $12.5 million in 2021 to acquire a site for the museum. State Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) helped secure an additional $5.5 million in state funding in 2022.

    What they're saying: "This investment is more than the purchase of a building; it is about creating a home to share the lessons of LGBTQ and allied history," Roberto Ordeñana, executive director of the GLBT Historical Society, said in a news release Thursday.

    • "The Castro is the heart of LGBTQ culture in this city and this country, and it is the perfect place for a museum that ... elevates our LGBTQ community and celebrates those who paved the way for us to have the freedoms we enjoy today," Breed added.

    Context: The historical society was founded in 1985 and operates the Dr. John P. De Cecco Archives and Research Center in addition to the museum.

    • Over 60 people — including members of the San Francisco Lesbian and Gay History Project and the San Francisco Gay and Lesbian Periodical Archives — banded together to promote understanding of Bay Area queer history.
    • Its first years of materials included records from the first LGBTQ American Indian liberation organization, pioneering trans historian Louis Sullivan, Daughters of Bilitis and photographer Crawford Wayne Barton.
    • The society opened its museum to the public in 2011 and later helped preserve the history of San Francisco's AIDS direct-action groups and rolled out an online archive of the LGBTQ newspaper Bay Area Reporter .

    What's next: Breed, Mandelman, Wiener and other city officials will join leaders from the GLBT Historical Society at 10am Friday for a community celebration to mark the milestone.

    Comments / 2
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    No2Globalist
    22d ago
    How about no.
    theodore bundt
    23d ago
    🍆🎯💩 exhibition
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