Biker ethos kick-started Folsom scene 




http://www.ebar.com/news/article.php?sec=news&article=6057 





Tony K. LeTigre 

09/22/2011 




Around the beginning of September when the black and blue flags go up, everyone 
knows it's that special time of year again: two months of sunlight and a whole 
lot of leather. 

On September 25 Folsom Street between 7th and 12th streets will be cordoned off 
for the Folsom Street Fair, as it has been for 27 years now, since "Megahood" 
started it all in 1984. 

Many of Folsom's attendees simply enjoy the fair for what it is today, without 
pondering its evolution through the years, or the South of Market neighborhood 
conditions that led to its creation. 

The gay male leather culture that hangs on today in SOMA and peaked in the 
pre-AIDS era has its roots in motorcycle clubs and marooned sailors and 
waterfront bars of the 1950s like Castaways and the Sea Cow. The first leather 
bars popped up in the Tenderloin, and were usually short-lived and subject to 
police harassment: The Spur Club, Why Not, and The Hideaway were all raided and 
closed between 1959-62. 

Author, anthropologist and leather historian Gayle Rubin, in her essential 1998 
essay "The Miracle Mile," traces the roots of today's gay male leather culture 
back to sailors and bikers: queer men who confounded the prevailing notion of 
homosexuals as effeminate and easily identified sissies. 

"If gay male leather can be said to have a core meaning, it would have to be 
masculinity," Rubin wrote, adding that the motorcycle, more than anything else, 
symbolized that masculinity. 

"Homomasculinity" was the word coined by Drummer magazine editor and 
pop-culture polymath Jack Fritscher to describe the gender expression of 
masculine-identified leathermen. 

Gay motorcycle clubs started with the Satyrs in L.A. in 1954. The Warlocks and 
the California Motorcycle Club, both San Francisco-based, soon followed. The 
first CMC Carnival in 1966 marked the inception of a social institution for the 
emerging leather scene, continuing to the birth of the Folsom Street Fair. 

"Leather culture was constructed on a discreet circuit of bike runs, bars, back 
rooms, and the annual autumn orgy of the CMC Carnival," wrote Fritscher in his 
essay on the first Folsom, "Leather's Burning Man." 

Rubin identified the opening of the Tool Box on Harrison Street in 1962 as the 
catalyzing agent of the leather scene "South of the Slot," as SOMA was called 
in the old days. 

Tool Box featured Chuck Arnett's legendary mural epitomizing the homomasculine 
ideal of the gay leather set and garnered national attention, including an 
infamous Life magazine spread in 1964 that crowned San Francisco the nation's 
"gay capital." 

The Life exposé largely conflated "homosexual" with "criminal pervert," but 
made some astute observations, including the objection of "homophile groups," 
like the Mattachine Society and the Council on Religion and the Homosexual, to 
the military's practice of dishonorably discharging known queers from its 
ranks. (In case you thought the now repealed "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" started 
with Clinton.) 

A police raid on a dance at California Hall on New Year's Eve in 1965 has since 
been branded "San Francisco's Stonewall" for the way it galvanized not only the 
nascent gay rights groups but also mainstream public sentiment through media 
coverage and the judicial system against police prejudice and abuse of power. 

Fair nights in the valley 

So began the feast of the kings, a latter-day Bacchanalian orgy when, in the 
words of San Francisco recording artist Donald Currie, "Gays took over, and we 
turned the city into a bathhouse." 

Febe's opened on Folsom Street in 1966 and long reigned as the leading gay 
biker bar. Mike Caffee's iconic "Leather David" served as the bar's logo. One 
elegist in the 1996 treasure trove Gay by the Bay recalled Sunday afternoons at 
Febe's as "a massive grope-a-torium where anything happened." 

The Stud, eldest surviving statesman of the scene today, opened the same year 
as Febe's. It started as a leather bar with a Hells Angels crowd but had 
morphed into a hippie haven by the time of Woodstock, complete with dance floor 
and psychedelic blacklight mural. 

All through the 1960s and on into the superlative 1970s new bastions of the 
leather kingdom sprang up: Bathhouses and sex clubs (The Barracks, The Plunge, 
The Sutro Baths, The Catacombs), shops and galleries (A Taste of Leather, 
upstairs at Febe's; a leather shopping mall called Big Town; Fey-Way Studio, 
the first gay art gallery), groups and events (The Warlocks' "Witches 
Christmas," CMC Carnival, the Satyrs' annual Badger Flat Run). 

And a plethora of bars joined the scene. To name just a few: Off the Levee, 
Ramrod, the No Name Bar (known by many names over the years, presently 
Powerhouse), the Trocadero (where Sylvester performed), the Bay Brick Inn (a 
lesbian pleasure palace), Folsom Prison, the Black and Blue, the Red Star 
Saloon. 

A spreadsheet maintained by the GLBT Historical Society lists 211 different 
names of gay bars, bathhouses, and related businesses in SOMA, past and 
present, though some are multiple names for the same location. 

The SOMA scene, in particular the bars grouped on and around Folsom Street in 
the vicinity of the present-day street fair, also acquired nicknames, 
sociological markers of a legend-in-the-making: The Miracle Mile, Valley of the 
Kings. 

The former name was bestowed by the late San Francisco Chronicle columnist Herb 
Caen, the latter by "Mr. Marcus" Hernandez, first Emperor of San Francisco and 
longtime B.A.R. leather columnist before his death in 2009. 

"Valley of Kings conveyed an image of powerful, cocky, independent, and sexy 
masculinity," Rubin expounded. "It contrasted with Marcus' nickname for Polk 
Street, 'The Valley of the Queens,' in reference to the older and sometimes 
more effeminate population of gay men associated with the area." 

The Castro was "The Valley of the Dolls," in reference to its "hordes of young 
and beautiful men" (in Rubin's words) as well as its pharmaceutical drug 
culture, "dolls" being old-school slang for pills. 

Circa 1971 the bandana or "hanky" code entered currency as a discrete way for 
leathermen to communicate their orientation and kinks. The first International 
Mr. Leather conference was held in Chicago in 1979, spinning off locally the 
Mr. San Francisco Leather Competition, as well as the Mr. Drummer Contest 
sponsored by Drummer magazine. 

Mr. Drummer led to the inception of San Francisco Leather Pride Week, as Rubin 
discussed in her heartfelt essay "Elegy for the Valley of the Kings." 

Miracle on Folsom Street 

At the same time that the Miracle Mile was coming into its own, an antithetic 
current was flowing through the neighborhood, a trend of "slum clearance and 
urban renewal." 

Folsom Street Fair co-founder Kathleen Connell, together with LGBT historian 
Paul Gabriel, penned an in-depth history, "The Power of Broken Hearts" 
available at http://folsomstreetfair.org/history , that documented the SOMA 
anti-gentrification movement. 

Connell and Gabriel chronicled how neighborhood activists organized against 
ruthless developers and government agents that regarded the neighborhood as an 
example of "urban blight" and traced the way that movement led to the genesis 
of the Folsom Street Fair. 

In 1980, while working for the South of Market Alliance, a neighborhood 
advocacy group, Connell met and befriended fellow gay activist Michael Valerio, 
who was also the assistant director for Tenants and Owners Development 
Corporation. 

Valerio and Connell found common ground in their support for low-income 
families, artists, senior citizens and the gays in SOMA, and in their desire to 
incorporate their "gay selves" into their work. 

The neighborhood was threatened by the encroachment of high-rise development, 
and the gay men's community was under attack by a new plague first identified 
in 1981: AIDS. Connell and Valerio decided to launch a SOMA fair as the best 
resistance against the powers that would destroy (or displace) them. 

"In addition to community preservation, we were making a big statement about 
the AIDS crisis, and trying to raise funds as there were no social services to 
speak of at that time," Connell told the B.A.R. 

>From their efforts came "Megahood," the first Folsom Street Fair, in 1984. 
>"South of Market Sizzles in September" promised a headline in the June/July 
>1984 edition of the South of Market News , a neighborhood paper whose hype 
>helped insure a good turnout. 

In the beginning Folsom was not explicitly a sex or leather event, but the gay 
leather scene was a significant presence from the start. Drummer endorsed the 
first fair, albeit with some misgivings. 

"Leatherfolk anxiety ran deep in Orwellian 1984, rightly suspicious of event 
producers purposing leather for fundraising parallax to the way Harvey Milk 
started the Castro Street Fair to sign up voters," Drummer editor-in-chief 
Fritscher recalled. 

Up Your Alley Street Fair, which started in 1985 on Ringold Street, was a 
dedicated gay leather event from the beginning. Ringold is an alley south of 
Folsom between 8th and 9th onto which a number of the leather bars exited. It 
wasn't the fair's home for very long. 

Connell's history recalled, "Ringold is a residential alley, and the neighbors, 
while tolerating dead-in-the-night activity, did not take kindly to this sudden 
explosion of leather and fetish men and women on their street. They 
successfully petitioned the city and the SFPD to rescind the granting of a 
license for a third year." 

If the move seemed a setback at first, the fair survived and then some. Around 
12,000 people - mostly gay leathermen - attend Dore Alley, as locals now know 
it, the last Sunday in July. 

Panic at the bathhouse 

The Folsom Street Fair sizzled, but the SOMA leather scene fizzled. It was 
AIDS, of course, that killed the party. The "Gay Cancer" triggered a wave of 
homophobic panic and revulsion directed at leathermen in particular. Feast 
abruptly turned to famine. 

The Castro survived to become the international attraction it is today, but the 
Folsom scene fell into permanent disrepair. The Castro's core was politics, 
which were fanned to a blaze by the AIDS crisis; but the core of Folsom was 
sex, and sex lost its infrastructure when the bathhouses closed. 

Bars closed, too. Tool Box had been torn down in 1971, a victim of 
redevelopment. A large fire in 1981, starting at the former Barracks, destroyed 
many homes and a number of key establishments. By the mid-80s, as the effects 
of AIDS intensified, leather bars began dropping like dominoes. 

When Febe's closed in June 1986, "Even the TV news covered it," as recollected 
in Geoff Mains' 1989 novel-elegy Gentle Warriors , which provides a poignant 
look back at the Miracle Mile's heyday in the form of a "last motorcycle ride" 
through the ailing bar district. 

Partly due to the toll of AIDS, the producers of Up Your Alley merged with 
those of the Folsom Street Fair in 1990, and it was around this time that the 
official posters and promotional images for Folsom became overtly 
"leather-ized," as they had not been previously. 

One of the many casualties of AIDS was Michael Valerio. He had gone on to form 
other community organizations and win various awards before succumbing to the 
disease at the age of 40. The B.A.R. printed his obituary in 1995. 

The bathhouses remain closed today: the legacy of public policy-makers swayed 
by hysteria and a virus we've learned to manage but not eradicate. A prowling 
sex fiend must cross the Bay Bridge and head to Steamworks in Berkeley for a 
club with private rooms. It seems the state of affairs of the mid-80s persists 
in the mainstream LGBT community to this day, a watershed shift away from open 
and unbridled sexuality. 

What does this mean for a demographic whose defining trait is sexual 
orientation? 

"I understand the panic back in the day, but now most sex clubs don't have 
proper cleaning facilities - aside from bathroom sinks," said B.A.R. leather 
columnist Scott Brogan. "I think that's much less healthy than having a private 
room with a bath that you can wash up in - or the public showers at the baths." 

Queer scholar Greg Jones, 36, who has written on bondage and sadomasochism in 
ancient Greece, recalled, "When I first moved to the city in 1998 people were 
still smoking pot and giving each other blowjobs in the back of the old Hole in 
the Wall. But the last time I tried to get frisky there the bartender came 
round and scolded us. 

"Now there are signs in bars, literally posted every 5 feet - especially during 
Folsom Weekend - that yell 'No sexual activity!'" added Jones. 

(Wicked Grounds Cafe now occupies the space of the original Hole in the Wall, 
which has moved a couple blocks away to 1369 Folsom St.) 

Former Lone Star Saloon manager Steve Hoffman, 46, said proprietors are caught 
between patrons who want Folsom to live up to its lascivious past and health 
and law enforcement officials reacting against that same reputation. 

"I can see the customer's point of view, but I definitely understand the 
owner's perspective too, because if you let people have sex in the back room 
and get busted, you lose your liquor license," Hoffman explained. 

Just such an incident caused the closure of My Place, formerly the Ramrod (1225 
Folsom St.) The space re-opened as Chaps II in 2008. (The original Chaps was 
located where the DNA Lounge is now.) 

No one would suggest that sex itself is seriously endangered. But what about 
the leather community? 

"It's obvious the leather scene isn't as strong as it used to be," said Hole in 
the Wall bartender Miguel Chavez. "And bars can't survive if they cater to 
people who only go out once a month." 

That explains the re-branding of Chaps II as Kok in spring 2011. Lone Star 
changed management and most of its staff in 2010, alienating some. (Hoffman 
hasn't been there since the change.) Most recently, the Eagle Tavern closed 
last April after nearly 30 years, ending a long tradition of Sunday afternoon 
beer busts that drew a diverse crowd including fetishists of all flavors. [See 
story Page 1.] 

(El Rio now hosts a beer bust called "The Eagle in Exile" on the first Sunday 
of every month - 3158 Mission St. at Precita.) 

Hoffman said that "leather" today has broadened into a catch-all term for kink 
in general, encompassing a profusion of fetishes – bears, military gear, 
sportswear, golden showers, exhibitionism, varieties of bondage and discipline. 
Furries, anyone? 

The Leathermen's Discussion Group, which meets the 4th Wednesday of every month 
above Blow Buddies (933 Harrison St.), held a panel discussion in July with 
historian Rubin as a panelist that asked, "Is Leather Dead?" 

"The leather community has become more privatized, and its ability to occupy 
public space in the Folsom has become more limited and occasional," Rubin wrote 
on the subject. "However, the Folsom is still a magnet, a piece of sacred 
ground, and a powerful symbol." 

Brogan attended the July discussion and described it and Rubin as "a blast." 

"The hanky code and leather uniforms in the old days were ways of letting 
people know what you were into," Brogan added. "It's true that things are much 
more open and accessible these days. Some might say too much so, but I believe 
things evolve naturally and there isn't anything to do about it except to enjoy 
the ride." 




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