St cloud mn gay bar
Beaudreau's Bar
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- "Staff is kind and prompt to refill cocktails! 😀"
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"Rhonda and Kelly delivered Great Service !!."
| Monday | 11 AM–1 AM |
|---|---|
| Tuesday | 11 AM–1 AM |
| Wednesday | 11 AM–1 AM |
| Thursday | 11 AM–1 AM |
| Friday | 11 AM–1 AM |
| Saturday | 10 AM–1 AM |
| Sunday | Closed |
Bar Loc: 45.565 / -94.1517
| Temperature | N/A °F | |
|---|---|---|
| feels like | N/A °F |
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The Pride Behind Pride
It’s the year 2020. Pride is cancelled. This is very hard to say out loud. It feels enjoy saying we’re cancelling pleasure and progress. Of course, the cancelling of Pride—the festival, the parade, the week when tens of thousands of far-flung LGBTQ peeps come streaming home—represents an act of value to keep people healthy.
But its absence presents us with an opportunity to consider all the profound and key local LGBTQ landmarks that built Pride—and often disappeared. Living in a urban area is complicated. Each of us lives in a different Twin Cities: We share the Foshay Tower and the Mississippi, but we go home to different bars and bedrooms.
LGBTQ cultures hold, historically, needed to cloak their bars and bedrooms for fear of eviction, firing, imprisonment, or worse. As Ricardo J. Brown put it in his St. Paul memoir, The Evening Crowd at Kirmser’s—one of the best mid-20th century looks at American gay experience—the LGBTQ being was “a ruse that kept all of us safe,” conducted in “a fort in the midst of a savage and hostile population.”
Hiding in forts was useful, important, necessary. But what was long hidden is easy to
New Community Center Coming to Downtown St. Cloud [PHOTOS]
ST. CLOUD (WJON News) -- A community center that is the first of its kind in the express is opening up in downtown St. Cloud.
The fresh non-profit Rainbow Wellness Collective is set to unwrap its 2SLGBTQIA+ Community Center later this winter. Board Chair Seal Dwyer says it is a much-needed resource in central Minnesota.
All of us have had experiences of people that are supposed to love us not. We know how to build chosen family. As a therapist what I noticed for years was that I would be prescribing community to people being like 'you can't be so isolated, you need to form friends, you need to get out there,' and they'd be like 'there's nowhere to go.'
Organizations including Queerspace Collective, Seal Dwyer Counseling, St. Cloud Pride, and OutFront Minnesota have already moved into the territory, and more tenants will be added in the coming weeks.
Dwyer says the new center will offer people a chance to find society and connection.
So people can just chill and just be themselves in a place where they're reliable, they're accepted, they're welcomed
St. Cloud Pride is a 501 (c)3 tax exempt, non-profit group, formed in 2010 to raise consciousness of issues of heterosexism and homophobia within the St. Cloud and surrounding community providing education, resources, programming and social opportunities to the Lesbian, Male lover, Bisexual, Transgender, Ally (LGBTA)community. Members of St. Cloud Pride range from all aspects of the Womxn loving womxn, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Gender non-conforming, Questioning, Intersex, Asexual, Ally spectrum, and pride themselves in being associated with the community.
In September of 2010, St. Cloud Event organized the first lgbtq+ fest celebration for the LGBTA community. It is estimated that well over 1700 people attended the many pride events. The St. Cloud Pride Board consists of the Chair, Vice-Chair, Secretary, Treasurer and 6 at-large members. Everyone is welcome to attend our meetings, give their input and be a part of the planning and organizing of our identity festival celebration and the maturation of our organization.
St. Cloud Pride is a 501 (c)3 tax exempt, non-profit group, formed in 2010 to raise awareness of issues of heterosexism and homophobia within the St. Cloud and surrounding collective providing education, resourc
.