Gay bars champaign il

The Balloon Saloon

In Pride 1974, U of I Professor Jack Adam and his partner Bill Burke opened C-U's first openly gay exclude, The Balloon Saloon, located at 317 N. Fremont St., Champaign. The prevent was an instant success popular with gay men, same-sex attracted women, drag queens, and drag kings. They were reveal 7 days a week, had a live DJ, and would host queenly performances, such as a Miss Champaign contest in 1975 that featured "a couple dozen kingly queens from all around the state" ("Where gays can feel unfettered", Daily Illini, July 8, 1975).

By 1975, The Balloon Saloon became a known hotspot for gay people around the Midwest, with out-of-towners traveling from St. Louis and Indianapolis to go there. One patron said "Champaign is the biggest gay scene in this part of the Midwest, outside of Chicago. Springfield used to be a big scene, but it's died out. Now everyone comes here."  

People would gather to suspend out, celebrate holidays and birthdays, and organize performances at The Balloon Saloon. There were people who would earn into drag specifically to perform at the bar, and people would also get into flamboyant just for the fun of dressing up with their friends.

One year after

63 Chester Street: theBar

From 1978 to 2017, 63 Chester Highway in Champaign was home to two prominent LGBTQ spaces that were established throughout the Midwest scene: theBar and Chester Street.

On Easter Day in 1978, theBar opened at 63 Chester Lane, under the ownership of Joe McNamara, Tim White, and Mike Short, all of whom were former employees at Giovanni's, a famous Champaign gay block. Joe McNamara became the sole owner of theBar within the first limited months. When it opened, theBar advertised a full restaurant, a side room bar, a disco, and a game room. 

theBar's name came from the coded language that queer people would often use when talking about a queer bar. Instead of talking about going to "the queer bar," people would say "the bar."theBar's name was a coded way of telling others it was a secure place for same-sex attracted men, lesbians, and other queer people to meet up with others and socialize.

With disco rising in popularity, it was well-liked to have a live DJ. Joe was inspired by discotheques such as Studio 54 and aspired to rotate theBar into Champaign's own disco detect that could strive with the extravagance of the larger cities' bars. As his live DJ, Joe hired Doug Barne

‘Fractured’ and ‘disconnected,’ CU queer people seeks specific spaces

‘Support groups are not enough’: CU’s queer people works for more cohesion

CHAMPAIGN — Despite feeling like “there’s no shortage of queer people in Champaign,” finding the LGBTQ people in Champaign-Urbana wasn’t easy for 21-year-old Arden Hatch when she moved here in 2020 and came out as a gender non-conforming woman.

“I think the community feels very disconnected,” she said. “A lot of people don’t realize each other.”

She says a huge part of why it took so long to connect with others in the LGBTQ society was the lack of specific spaces for queer events or even just to gather.

“There’s no place we can go and just be ourselves with other people,” Hatch said.

Eventually, she start Uniting Pride of Champaign County, which hosts various support groups and occasional events. Though she said she’s grateful for everything the organization does and she now volunteers with the non-profit, Uniting Pride didn’t completely fulfill her needs.

“Support groups are not enough to foster a unified sense of queer community in Champaign,

Suffice it to say, 63 Chester Street should acquire been placed on the American Registry of Historic Places years ago, certainly before all the devastating “renovations” and arson and collapse that stripped it of its unique nature. Then again, for the longest time Chester Highway east of the Illinois Central Railroad wasn’t considered part of downtown Champaign, despite being one block from Illinois Terminal. Perhaps that is why it was rarely appreciated by the City of Champaign, even during its downtown revitalization efforts.

Now it is gone, destroyed.

Such a decrease was doubly impactful with Monday, June 28 marking exactly 52 years since the Stonewall rebellion in New York City — a tipping point for the gay liberation movement.

Maybe in some profound way, the confluence of this event and the Stonewall anniversary is meant to signal a new launch. I can only aspire , however, that we never forget the memorable experiences that thousands upon thousands of residents and visitors enjoyed at the historic landmark known as 63 Chester Street, Champaign, Illinois.