The US of Gay – Dallas Voice
Fifty-one ab-fab road-trip destinations and pit stops that are must-sees and -dos for out-and-proud wanderlusters
MIKEY ROX | Contributing Writer
Instagram @mikeyroxtravels
There are a million things to love about traveling the United States — from our sprawling national parks and historic coastal cities to tucked-away small towns and southern hospitality. But every once in a while, we need to experience our people in our places.
As it turns out, there’s queer fun to be found everywhere — in areas that you would never suspect, in fact — throughout the entire country. When planning your next “family”-friendly getaway, consider these welcoming attractions, establishments, events and gatherings in all 50 states and the nation’s capital that exist by and for the LGBTQ community.
Alabama
Praise Him on high (before hitting a boozy brunch; wine is Jesus-approved, remember) at Cornerstone Metropolitan Community Church in Mobile, a predominately LGBTQ congregation led by lesbian pastor, the Rev. Sara Sills. Sunday service begins at 10:45 a.m. Arrive early for easy parking, visit the institution’s welcome center and take a guided tour of the campus.
Alaska
Newly renovated Mad Myrna’s, located in downtown Anchorage, hosts a wide range of LGBTQ events, including movie nights, drag and strip shows, karaoke and Pride pageants. This nightlife mainstay, along with queer dive bar The Raven just down the street, has provided last-frontier fabulousness for over two decades.
Arizona
A pair of well-worn cowboy boots and a bottle of sunscreen are all you’ll need for a rugged, clothing-optional weekend at the all-male Copper Cactus Ranch, quietly nestled deep in the foothills of the Superstition Mountains in Queen Valley. Weekends feature bonfires, musical jam sessions, drum circles and body painting, among other activities that encourage boys to be boys.
Arkansas
Pet-friendly Pond Mountain Lodge is the longest continuously operating gay-owned resort in Eureka Springs, where you can enjoy the great outdoors while hiking, fishing, swimming, picnicking and more. It’s also become a queer wedding destination in the South since the landmark SCOTUS marriage-equality decision was handed down.
(Also check out Wanderoo Lodge in Eureka Springs, owned by Ethan and David Avenzino.)
California
You may recognize lesbian-owned Hicksville Trailer Palace as the setting for Lana Del Rey’s “White Dress” music vid, but this dog-friendly, 21-and-older desert oasis in Joshua Tree hosts travelers in 11 individually-designed vintage mini-mobile homes situated on seven acres flush with fun and games, including a ball pit, arcade, cornhole, putt-putt, a BB gun and archery range, shuffleboard, ping-pong and darts.
Colorado
Memorialize your road trip with fresh ink — maybe your route map or a memorable symbol — at LGBTQ-owned Pens & Needles Custom Tattoo Company, voted Best Tattoo Shop in Colorado Springs.
Connecticut
Once you’ve quelled your hunger pangs with the Traveler Restaurant’s classic dining options, like linguini and meatballs, pizza, fried seafood platters and BLTs, browse the stacks — of books, that is — to find your favorite LGBTQ authors or stories. This quaint country eatery in Union allows each person to take home up to three titles — for free — from the selection of thousands that line its walls.
Delaware
Frolic in the sand and surf on decidedly gay Poodle Beach — you’ll find it at the far southern end of the Rehoboth Boardwalk near Queen Street (a bit on the nose, but what can ya do?) — before cleaning up and heading out for a night of queer revelry in this lively shore town with a rich LGBTQ history.
District of Columbia
Queer or not, every American should pay a visit to the Supreme Court, judiciously located at 1 First Street in Washington, D.C., the battleground for many milestone equal-rights cases, including the game-changing Obergefell v. Hodges, which, in 2015, granted marriage rights to same-sex couples across the United States.
Florida
Dedicated solely to LGBTQ history, civil rights, art and culture, the Stonewall National Museum and Archives in Fort Lauderdale (with a branch in neighboring Wilton Manors) features three gallery spaces with changing monthly and bimonthly exhibits, and includes a permanent timeline of American queer history.
Georgia
Strip down and relax in the steam room, sauna and pools of this clothing-optional, membership-only men’s bathhouse in midtown Atlanta that hosts weekly events like Bear & Daddy Night on Tuesdays, $5 lockers on Wednesdays and a complimentary BBQ on Sundays from 2-6 p.m.
Hawaii
Join the LGBTQ Honolulu FrontRunners/Walkers every Saturday at 8:30 a.m. in Kapi’olani Park for a tourists-are-welcome sweat sesh around stunning Waikiki ($10 for singles/$15 for couples) before brunching with the group at a downtown restaurant, pit stains and all.
Idaho
You’ll need to lace up your hiking boots to reach the two-miles-in-and-back Goldbug Hotsprings, the trailhead of which starts on BLM land just south of the Elk Bend community. But it’ll be well worth your while when you slip out of your shorts and soak nude in natural pools of varying degrees, surrounded by picturesque scenery.
Illinois
Pay homage to the queer pioneers who blazed their own trails toward LGBTQ equality on a self-guided tour of the Legacy Walk in Chicago’s Northalsted neighborhood, the placards of which on the area’s 40 rainbow-colored pylons honor our community’s heroes, including Oscar Wilde, Harvey Milk, Antonia Pantoja, Frida Kahlo and Alvin Ailey.
Indiana
Put your name on the list at popular Bloomington distillery/bar/kitchen Cardinal Spirits, where you’ll nosh on inspired (but affordable) dishes like lamb barbacoa tacos and gochujang tomato and cantaloupe gazpacho. Sip on canned bourbon cream sodas and take home a bottle of its Indiana corn Pride vodka, 10 percent of the proceeds of which support local LGBTQ orgs.
Iowa
Stop for a photo op at the “American Gothic” cottage in Eldon, famously depicted in gay artist Grant Wood’s oft-parodied same-name 1930 painting, which has since become an iconic example of 20th century American art.
Kansas
With its rainbow-flag-painted façade, Equality House, a project of Planting Peace in Topeka, gained international notoriety (surely you saw the news stories; they were everywhere) when it revealed itself as a beacon of hope and equality against evil forces, specifically the anti-everything Westboro Baptist Church, which is right across the street.
Kentucky
Bourbon — but make it gay. That’s your task as you bounce from one celebrated distillery to the next (most of which are within walking distance of each other along the Ohio River) in downtown Louisville. Stumble back and sleep it off at tobacco warehouse-turned-boutique hotel Vu Guesthouse.
Louisiana
Beat the oppressive New Orleans heat with a summertime treat at queer-women-owned Chance in Hell SnoBalls, a traveling winter-in-a-cup pop-up shop in the Bywater that serves frosty flavors like grape Nehi, pineapple-cilantro-chili, refreshing cucumber-cardamom-basil and ginger matcha.
Maine
When in Maine you order the lobster roll — given — but when dining at Ogunquit’s gay-owned The Front Porch you have your pick of elevated seafood. Start with blue cheese mussels or the oyster trio before settling into entrees like lobster risotto or haddock tacos. When you’re stuffed to the gills (fish pun intended), head upstairs to the restaurant’s bar where you can sing along nightly to show tunes and standards around a grand piano (the pianists take requests), lit from above by fixtures fashioned from old hats.
Maryland
One of the last bastions of LGBTQ Baltimore nightlife (Charm City has lost most of its queer bars and hangouts in the past few years), the Eagle, which celebrates 30 years on the scene in 2021, has triumphed over financial ups and downs to keep its doors open to the leather and kink communities and those who love them. Pro-tip: Head to the Toolbox for all the what-happens-there-stays-there excitement you’re seeking.
Massachusetts
Following the route of Boston’s first Gay Pride March in 1971, the Equality Trail walking tour includes 13 sites around Beantown, including 81-year-old Bay Village gay bar Jacques, the police headquarters on Berkeley Street, the State House on Beacon Hill and St. Paul’s Cathedral on Tremont Street, where, 50 years ago, peaceful protesters issued a list of civil-rights demands at each location.
Michigan
Test your pop-culture prowess at Five15, a retail shop with a stage (and bar) in downtown Royal Oak, on its drag queen trivia nights, the latest of which featured Schitt’s Creek-centric questions. If memory games aren’t your milieu, opt for less-skilled activities, like weekend drag bingos and the some-Sundays Drag Brunch Cookout.
Minnesota
Friends of Dorothy can follow a yellow brick road (of sorts) to the Judy Garland Museum, established in the actress’s birth town of Grand Rapids, where you’ll learn about the troubled star’s illustrious life and career, or, on a lucky day, attend a Garland-focused event, book signing or festival.
Mississippi
Set sail for Ship Island, off the Gulf Islands National Seashore in Biloxi, in your private vessel or hop aboard the public ferry in Gulfport from March to October. If you arrive in your own boat, anchor near Fort Massachusetts, swim ashore and make the trek on foot to the easternmost end of the isle for legal sunning and funning in the buff.
Missouri
Foodies will get a crash course in late-18th-/early-19th-century American cuisine from LGBTQ and James Beard semi-finalist chef Rob Connoley, who presents a reservations-required, seven-course, Ozark-inspired tasting menu Thursdays to Sundays at Bulrush in St. Louis. Each meal includes staff explanations of the dishes, a history and QR code-accessible videos on the top-rated restaurant’s research projects.
Montana
Research will show that there’s not much in the way of LGBTQ-specific recreation in traditionally conservative Montana, but if you’re traveling through Big Sky Country, consider a stop into Missoula’s Gay Men’s Meeting at The Center, held every Wednesday from 7 to 9 p.m.
Nebraska
Belly up to the bar at Omaha Mining Company ‚— an on-the-fringe gay watering hole that has, according to one Yelp reviewer, “existed since the 1960s between the Douglas County jail and urban blight” (though tighter parking has made the area much safer these days) — and order an ice-cold lager or similar no-nonsense libation before heading downstairs to the Mineshaft for pool tables and art. Every fourth Saturday of the month the Big O! Bears group hosts a growling good time.
Nevada
After you’ve made your requisite donation to Las Vegas’ glitzy casinos, ease the pain with a trip to the Fruit Loop, a cluster of gay bars and clubs along East Naples Drive, near the University of Nevada. Badlands Saloon and Charlie’s, both country-western bars (this is the desert, after all), along with the Las Vegas Eagle and FreeZone offer plenty of merriment without losing your ass — unless that’s what you’re into.
New Hampshire
Dabble in the dark arts with a visit to the “magick retirement” cottage of bisexual British occultist and “Wickedest Man in the World” Aleister Crowley, whose four-month stay at this house in Hebron, owned by self-professed medium Evangeline Adams, resulted in myriad “secret and arcane” activities. If you’re superstitious of the supernatural, there’s a church conveniently located next door to cleanse your sassy soul.
New Jersey
Asbury Park, a 1.6-square-mile city located on the northern Jersey Shore, has a long and sordid history — from disproportionately impoverished minority communities and race riots to political corruption and a severely underserved school system. But it has since overcome many of those obstacles to emerge as one of the most densely populated LGBTQ communities in the Mid-Atlantic. There’s tons for you and your fey friends to do here, too. Shop for kitsch at Severedwing, belt your signature tune on karaoke nights at Georgie’s, enjoy a chef-prepared meal at Hotel Tides, dance poolside at Paradise and carry out an artisanal pizza from Medusa Stone Fired Kitchen, all of which are gay-owned and -operated (and just a sampling of the abundant LGBTQ businesses around town).
New Mexico
Rest your weary head at the eponymous, well-appointed house of wealthy bisexual arts patron Mabel Dodge Luhan, now a National Historic Landmark and B&B in Taos, which has welcomed such visionaries as Georgia O’Keefe, D.H. Lawrence, Ansel Adams and Martha Graham.
New York
Directly across the street from Manhattan’s Stonewall Inn — the site of the June 28, 1969, Stonewall riots — is the Stonewall National Monument, designated as such by the National Park Service on June 24, 2016. It encompasses Christopher Park and the block of Christopher Street bordering the park in the West Village. Pop into the gift shop for a souvenir before entering the inn for cocktails and local oral history.
North Carolina
Pick up a few cans of spray paint and head to the ever-changing Free Expression Tunnel, connecting the north and central campuses of North Carolina State University in Raleigh, where you can add your own progressive designs and messages that students and tourists alike can enjoy for years to come (or at least until another artist paints over them).
North Dakota
If you’re seeking more stimulating conversation on your gaycay than your travel partner is capable of providing (dull queers do exist, y’all), join the Queerly Reading book and discussion club, which meets every second Saturday of the month at 9:30 a.m. in the Bismarck Barnes & Noble Café. Join its Facebook group for title selections and to contribute ideas.
Ohio
Cleveland-based DJ Ala — or, at the very least, popularizing it — so it’s only fitting that the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame was born here, too. Inductees include many of your LGBTQ music idols, from Janis Joplin and Joan Jett to Freddie Mercury and Elton John.
Oklahoma
Many queer folx got their first sensation of same-sex attraction by playing with shapely superheroes when they were kids (what future gay boy didn’t pine for a peek under the Caped Crusader’s codpiece?), and you can relive that age of innocence at the Toy and Action Figure Museum, filled to the brim with more than 13,000 distinct characters and many mint-condition collectibles, located in Pauls Valley.
Oregon
Portland-based Wild Diversity offers a full slate of outdoors activities (that require advance reservations) — which include bird watching around Whitaker Pond, a two-day Willamette River paddling adventure, writers’ retreats and a deaf community campout, among many others — specifically geared toward (but not limited to) BIPOC and QTBIPOC.
Pennsylvania
Pay your respects by setting a can of Campbell’s Soup beside the final resting place of gay pop-art icon Andy Warhol, whose gravesite at St. John the Baptist Byzantine Catholic Cemetery in the town of Castle Shannon is broadcast 24/7 on his museum’s website as part of a project called “Figment.”
Rhode Island
After a day of exploration in queer-friendly Providence — The Stable, Mirabar and The Dark Lady are known for their neighborly customer service — spend a night or two at the Old Town Inn in New Shoreham or Newport’s Francis Malbone House, both gay-owned and secluded on nearby islands.
South Carolina
In a walking city like Charleston, you can spend an entire day sightseeing, and one of the can’t-miss photo ops is Rainbow Row, comprised of 13 brightly colored townhomes along East Bay Street on the Charleston Harbor. After you’ve fulfilled your daily step requirement, take a load off and relax with a crafty selection of Moscow mules at historic queer haunt Dudley’s on Ann.
South Dakota
Club David is as good as it gets for queer congregating in a state not exactly known for its LGBTQ progressiveness. Still, you’ll manage to catch a penny-pinching buzz with nightly drinks specials (many of which are half-price) and occasional events like drag bingo on the rooftop patio.
Tennessee
Throw your hands up as you barrel through the Thunderhead rollercoaster, stroll through the Chasing Rainbows Museum and tap your feet to the Dreamland Drive-In musical show at Dollywood, the namesake theme park of everybody’s favorite LGBTQ-lovin’ glam-ma Dolly Parton, in Pigeon Forge.
Texas
Download the 1956 Western film Giant to your tablet, open a bottle of wine, snuggle up in bed and press play in a stately room at Marfa’s Hotel Paisano, which hosted LGBTQ icons Elizabeth Taylor, Rock Hudson and James Dean (in his final role) as they shot scenes for the flick in this charming Far West Texas town 66 years ago.
Utah
Despite his Mormon upbringing, wanted Wild West outlaw Butch Cassidy might have been gay. Allegedly, his mother heard noises and wondered what he and his new cowboy friend Mike Cassidy, whose last name he eventually took, “were doing down by the corral.” (A mother always knows what’s up, doesn’t she?) See where it all started with a visit to the thief-with-a-heart-of-gold’s humble boyhood abode and poke around the family plot, located in Panguitch.
Vermont
Fill a waffle cone with your favorite Ben & Jerry’s flavor at its factory-based Scoop Shop in Waterbury before taking a saunter through the behind-the-building-and-up-the-hill Flavor Graveyard where discontinued pints, like Schweddy Balls and Vermonty Python, rest in peace. The confectionary connoisseurs are longtime supporters of the LGBTQ community, most recently celebrating International Transgender Day of Visibility.
Virginia
Satisfy your sweet tooth at Ruby Scoops, a Black- and LGBTQ-owned ice cream shop in Richmond’s Brookland Park neighborhood, which serves up premium, small-batch, made-from-scratch ice creams, sorbets, sherbets, and desserts in tantalizing taste combos like roasted pineapple/rosemary, strawberry/sweet red bean, and guava daiquiri, plus a few tried-and-true standards, too.
Washington
Come for a haircut, stay for the coffee at Seattle-based Squirrel Chops, a queer-owned hybrid salon and café where you can kill two birds with one stone when you get a perm and your daily pick-me-up.
West Virginia
Photo-capture rainbows in the mist as sunrays reflect off the tannic acid-darkened water of the 57-foot cascading Blackwater Falls in the Allegheny Mountains of Tucker County, then pitch a tent at the state park’s campground for a night of slap-and-tickle under the stars.
Wisconsin
Pizza and wine is a treasured culinary combo — at least for booze and junk-food enthusiasts (i.e. non-psychopaths) — and you’ll find options aplenty at wife-and-wife-owned Trouble and Sons in Whitefish Bay, where you also can order fresh salads to trick yourself into feeling healthy while getting fat and happy.
Wyoming
You may have trouble finding the exact spot where Matthew Shepard was brutally beaten and left to die by two homophobes in 1998, as it remains unmarked to this day. But a memorial bench on the University of Wyoming campus in Laramie serves as a sufficient spot to remember our modern-day martyr.
Mikey Rox is an award-winning journalist and LGBT lifestyle expert whose work has been published in more than 100 outlets across the world. He’s currently nomading across the country in his van, seeking queer excitement everywhere he roams. Connect with Mikey on Instagram @mikeyroxtravels