Our Proud History - Shared Memories
By: Rosie Marin
San Francisco and Sausalito both became gay meccas after WWII. SF was the big center, but Sausalito had more gay bars per capita by far. In the 60's and 70's there was Agatha's Pub, the Sausalito Inn (tag line: take a ferry to San Francisco and bring a fairy home), and the Two Turtles.
The artists and the beats and the hippies were all here, so were the queers.
Then came AIDS. Agatha's had closed in the 70's, and became Angelino's. The Two Turtles closed by the mid-eighties and became the Sausalito Ferry Company; the Sausalito Inn closed shortly after and became multiple different shops. The only gay space left in town was the front bar area of the 7-Seas, then they converted the front area to an ice cream shop. The 7-Seas was then sold and converted to the biggest tourist shop in the downtown.
Back in the day, the toilets at the back of the Two Turtles had windows that opened onto the rear dining room of the 7-Seas. Upon discovering that, many of us never returned to the rear dining room space of the 7-Seas, and only ate up front in the bar area (that may be the reason it became the last gay gathering place in town, another unintended consequence).
The visible gay population in Sausalito in the 60's and 70's was mostly male. There were lesbian clubs/bars popping up all around San Francisco, but not here. Agatha's Pub was the most eclectic of the Sausalito bars: gay/straight/men/women. The Sausalito Inn was mostly "older" (ie 40's up and their younger companions) gay men, and the two straight women who worked there for years. When local lesbians went out to a gay bar in town it was the Two Turtles.
There were no gay events in town, except drag shows at the Sausalito Inn. There were many gay men living in Sausalito, and they were visible. There were many gay women living in Sausalito, but far less visible. The feminist movement of the 70's coincided with the queer movement. Most of the gay women were participating in both.
And, of course, back in the 70's transgenders were just starting to receive recognition, if not acceptance. Acknowledgement of gender neutral, non-binary, agender, pangender, genderqueer, cisgender, two-spirit, third gender, and all, none or a combination of these was still on the far horizon.
The 80's brought HIV and a mammoth change to queer socializing in San Francisco and Sausalito. The Castro is a prime example of that change, so is downtown Sausalito.