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The Tavern Guild would be formed in 1962 as the first gay business association in the country. It just began to multiply, and it was the place to be on the weekends and the weeknights.” Slowly people began to open more things that were gay oriented. “I just knew that the moneyed crowds from the fancy neighborhoods surrounding would come,” he recalled, referring to the “people you would see in society pages” from Nob Hill and Pacific Heights. They bought it, remodeled, and opened Gramaphone records in May of 1961. The next year, Wallace’s partner found “an old market that was going out …in pretty derelict condition” next to the Squire. In 1960, a gay couple opened the Town Squire, a “mod” clothing store, on Polk Street. We were doing all right, but we weren’t making money.” He also didn’t “feel at ease” on Union Street. “I really think we could do better out there. But the men who walked up and down the street were: “It was the cruisiest street in the city,” Wallace said.īy 1961, Wallace and his partner had opened a record store in the Marina. In the 1950s, it was populated by “mom and pop” stores, Wallace recalled, including “little stores that ladies ran,” news stands, candy stores, shoe repair stores, drug stores, and markets.
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Wallace and his partner socialized with other gay men at Aquatic Park “every weekend” while sunbathing, cruising, and listen to Tallulah Bankhead on a portable radio.īelow Aquatic Park, Polk Street ran down to Civic Center. He lived in the centrally located Nob Hill area, bordered by the “cruisy” Huntington and Layfayette Parks and within walking distance of the Opera House and many of the city’s scattered gay bars. “San Francisco was considered a very permissive city,” he explained.
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Randall Wallace moved to San Francisco in the early 1950s from Seattle.