Gay club york pa

York County Welcomes the LGBTQ+ Community!

If you're looking to back LGBTQ+ owned/friendly businesses during your next trip to York County, then we own exactly what you need! Check out the multitude of restaurants, places to stay, shops, and experiences our area has in store. 

LGBTQ+ Owned/Operated

Rainbow Rose Center

The Rainbow Rose Center is a valuable resource which provides connections, emergency rental assistance & housing endorse , name change assistance, and more to the community in York County. They offer great back groups for all adult identities, gender diversity, QTPOC, living proudly with HIV, silver triangle, and proud families. The Rainbow Rose Center also offers custom coaching sessions which assist you to perceive the LGBTQIA+ group, including our rights, risks, and needs a bit superior. Topics within these training sessions involve allyship, health, national violence, politics, youth, aging, transitioning, and more. 

The Handsome Cab

The Handsome Cab Restaurant and Wine Exclude is a relaxing and sophisticated see where everyone is welcome. Whether stopping in for a quick cocktail or indulging in a full meal of

Guerrilla Gay Bar York: Watch what happens when LGBTQ crowd crashes the neighborhood bar


It's a chance to bring two communities together in a common space.

On most weekends, Javier Aguayo is down in Washington, D.C., where he and his husband hold an apartment.

But about a month ago, two of his D.C. friends were coming to visit York. He needed to come across something to do.

Searching around online, Aguayo landed on a Facebook group called Guerrilla Gay Lock York.

It seemed fancy a novel thought, and with no gay bar in York County the 50-year-old York College politics professor decided to check it out.

"They came along and were really impressed," Aguayo said. "They thought York was some sort of gay haven."

There used to be established gay bars in York County but one of the last, Altland's Ranch, closed in 2016.

Read: A lot has changed in downtown York in the last few months. Here's an update

Guerrilla Lgbtq+ Bar York aims to change that.

Its concept is simple. 

On the second Saturday of each month, the group posts on its Facebook page which bar in downtown York its followers will go to. It makes the announcement usually in the afternoon and tel

 

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Let's keep this Pennsylvania centered please.

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I'm a mid-20s young professional, gay male, considering a move to York. There is a good job opportunity for me there, and I have also fallen in love with the historic architecture and beauty of the town. I reflect York offers so much. I've been living in Pittsburgh for about five years now, and I am yearning for a more walkable (I was able to walk around the whole city of York without using a car. It would be so nice to stroll to work.),

York's only remaining gay bar closes


York County's oldest and last remaining gay bar has closed, according to the Altland's Ranch Facebook page.

The Spring Grove bar made the closing announcement Tuesday night and thanked its many supporters over the years. As of Thursday afternoon, the Facebook post had received more than 130 reactions — mostly sad — and 170 comments, ranging from "So sad! This is where I discovered my genuine self" to "What a horrible way to go out for such a great place!!! SHAME ON YOU!!"

Robert Stump, a court-appointed legal guardian of surviving owner Rodney Nagle, said the judgment to close the establishment at 8505 Orchard Road was made because of a lack of support from the people. The business was created in 1967, according to state Department of State records.

The building is now for sale, and those wishing to inquire about purchasing it can reach Stump at (215) 802-9050.

Charles Kress, longtime co-chair of Parents, Families and Friends of Gays and Lesbians (PFLAG) in York, said he had worked at The Ranch for many years as a cook, barback and doorman, retiring last December.

"It was a place everyone could proceed to be themselves, the only place for