Thursday, June 11, 2015

Recap: California Pride Pinning Workshop in San Francisco



Lauren Tabak of the Lexington Club Archival Project, presenting on how they are working to preserve the memories of San Francisco’s iconic lesbian bar. The lovely California Historical Society served as our venue for the night.

Last night, we held the first workshop for California Pride, our new project to map out important LGBTQ places and stories in the state of California. With collaborators the Lexington Club Archival ProjectGLBT Historical Society, and Bay Area Lesbian History Archives Project on hand, the aim of night was to introduce attendees to the project on Historypin and facilitate a story-collecting session focusing on LGBTQ places in California meaningful to them. We called it a “pinning party” and it was certainly a lot of fun! Our friends at the California Historical Society (CHS) were kind enough to host the event in their exhibition space in downtown San Francisco, and helped us organize the event along with California Pride power co-founders Donna Graves and Shayne Watson.
After great introductions from CHS, the Lexington Project, Shayne, and Donna, we broke into smaller groups for our story-collecting session. Thanks to outreach from Donna and Shayne, we had over 7 fantastic volunteers including students from UC Berkeley and friends from SF Heritage and the National Park Service. Each volunteer helped to facilitate conversations in each group and the filling-out of story sheets we created for the night; these sheets asked for information specific to pinning on Historypin such as location and date, and stories shared will either contribute to a new pin or help enrich an existing pin in the project.
A highlight of the night was the end of the event, where Donna invited volunteers and participants to come up to the mic and share a story heard or told as part of their individual groups. This was a great way to tie-together the session, and an opportunity for the entire room to share in some of the stories collected throughout the night. Overall, this was a fantastic event that helped bring together those in the local community both actively preserving and interested in preserving LGBTQ history, while introducing how participants could continue sharing their stories on Historypin. Hopefully this is first of many, we’ve already received interest from Sacramento and Los Angeles. Thanks to all who helped organize!

Lenn Keller poses with a board of memories she brought in as part of the Bay Area Lesbian History Archives Project. Photo credit Matthew S. Bajko.

(right) a partial view of the story sheet that we distributed for the event, and (left) a (unfortunately) blurry photo of an attendee holding one!

Moses Corrette posing with his pin on Historypin after we recorded his story about the house where the “guerilla bar movement” was formed, where members of the LGBTQ community would meet once-a-month and pick out non-queer bars in which to gather and hang out. Though not planned for the night, I managed to live-pin Moses’ story with my laptop, and we were even able to do some quick-fire research on places to help jog some memories.



Attendee Drew shares a funny and powerful story of reclaiming Halloween for the LGBTQ community in San Francisco’s Castro district.

Posing with my fantastic story-group members (from left) Xan, Patricia, and Zoe, who shared wonderful stories of their LGBTQ activism in the last few decades, not only in California but around the country. I felt lucky to be able to spend time with these fantastic women and to help record some of their stories onto Historypin.

Posing with the night’s great organizers Shayne Watson (middle) and Donna Graves (right), who have taken years of work on San Francisco’s Historic Context Statement for LGBTQ history to now a new project collaboration over Historypin.


-Kerri, Historypin Community Officer

Tuesday, May 19, 2015





Historypin Pinning Party | Wednesday 10 June 2015 
California Historical Society, 678 Mission Street, San Francisco
6:00-7:30 PM

On June 10, 2015, join us for the first in a series of statewide events for a new project called California Pride: Mapping LGBTQ Histories. California Pride is designed to be an online, crowd-sourced archive of memories, stories, and images related to sites throughout the Golden State associated with lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) experience.

Bay Area lesbian history will be the focus of the first California Pride pinning party, although all LGBTQ stories and anyone interested in LGBTQ history are welcome.  In April 2015, San Francisco saw its last full-time lesbian bar, the Lexington Club, close its doors for good—leaving the city without a lesbian bar for the first time since the 1930s.  The site of another beloved gathering spot, Amelia’s on Valencia Street, is threatened with demolition.

The California Pride pinning party will begin with a short presentation by the directors of the Lexington Club Archival Project, an effort to document this popular queer space.  Attendees will then learn how to “pin” their favorite LGBTQ historic sites to the California Pride map.

California Pride can help bring awareness to the powerful, diverse stories that make up LGBTQ history — from major events to commonplace histories of daily life. People with stories, photos, flyers and other ephemera associated with LGBTQ history throughout the Bay Area are invited to help build this on-line archive as well as people interested in learning more about preserving California’s LGBTQ history are encouraged to attend.

For more information on California Pride visit www.historypin.org/project/469-california-pride/ or contact sflgbthistory@gmail.com.  To RSVP, go to http://capridepinningparty.eventbrite.com


This event is sponsored by the California Historical Society and the GLBT Historical Society. 
California Pride is supported by the National Trust for Historic Preservation and the California Preservation Foundation.


Monday, March 23, 2015

How-To Contribute to this Project


Here are some helpful resources for contributing to California Pride on Historypin:


Before adding to California Pride, you must first create a free Historypin profile. Here is a short video on how to create and customize your profile.





Short video on how-to pin to California Pride on Historypin. Remember that you must pin through the project page in order for your content to appear in the project.



To learn more about all of Historypin's features more generally, check-out this complete User Guide (click image).

If you have any general questions about using Historypin, please email Kerri Young kerri.young@historypin.org.


Tuesday, March 3, 2015

About California Pride



California Pride: Mapping LGBTQ Histories is designed to be an online archive of memories, stories, and images related to sites throughout the Golden State that are associated with lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) experience in California.

LGBTQ history is best told by the people who have lived it. Your pins will help make California Pride a reflection of the diverse places that define LGBTQ experience. Where was the heart of your LGBTQ community? Where did you attend activist meetings or go to cultural events? Where were the great house parties? What was your favorite bar or club? Where did you shop for books, music, and clothes?

California Pride is led by architectural historian Shayne Watson and public historian Donna Graves. The project is supported by a grant from the National Trust for Historic Preservation and fiscal sponsorship by the California Preservation Foundation.

This project builds on two recent studies in San Francisco and Los Angeles that document the critical role California has played in LGBTQ history in the United States: the Citywide Historic Context Statement for LGBTQ History in San Francisco, co-authored by Donna Graves and Shayne Watson; and the LGBT Historic Context Statement for Los Angeles, authored by Teresa Grimes, Laura O’Neill and Amanda Yoder of GPA Consulting.

If you'd like to get in contact or have any questions, please email: sflgbthistory@gmail.com.

California Pride banner images courtesy of GLBT Historical Society and ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives.