overview

This collection of Staten Island sites highlights the borough’s long and surprisingly rich LGBT history through former bars and clubs, residences of notable people — such as Alice Austen and Audre Lorde — and college campuses that helped foster political and social involvement among young LGBT people.

While much of New York City’s known LGBT history and life centers on Manhattan, we are currently working on adding more Staten Island sites to our website. If you have a suggestion, please fill out our online form.

This theme was made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and the New York State Legislature,  and a grant from Con Edison.

Header Photo
Audre Lorde, 1983 (cropped). Photo by Robert Alexander. Source: Robert Alexander Archives.

Historic Sites in Staten Island

25 Hyatt Street

The Staten Island AIDS Task Force, now Community Health Action of Staten Island (CHASI), opened its first office in this building at 25 Hyatt Street in 1988. In the mid-1990s,... Learn More

Organization & Community Spaces
1000 Richmond Terrace

Once a home for aged sailors, the Sailors’ Snug Harbor Cultural Center and Botanical Gardens has been an important venue for LGBT culture and events since the 1980s. In particular,... Learn More

Cultural & Educational Institutions
45 Belmont Place

The Jamaican-born author Michelle Cliff was living in this two-family house when she graduated from nearby Curtis High School in 1965. In later years, when she became a prominent writer,... Learn More

Residences
123 Androvette Street

On January 22, 1990, Vietnam War veteran Jimmy Zappalorti was murdered near his home on the South Shore of Staten Island because he was gay. The highly publicized murder became... Learn More

Public Spaces
715 Ocean Terrace

Now occupied by a public school, the campus of Staten Island Community College, later the Sunnyside campus of the College of Staten Island, was a center of LGBT activities on... Learn More

Cultural & Educational Institutions
70 Beach Street

Located in the former Liberty Theatre, Park Villa II (later On Stage), was a popular dance club during the 1980s and early 1990s. Between 1984 and 1991, Lambda Associates, the... Learn More

Bars, Clubs & Restaurants
2 Hylan Boulevard

Pioneering female photographer Alice Austen grew up in her family’s home where she later lived with schoolteacher Gertrude Tate, her partner of 55 years. Austen’s work includes early images of... Learn More

Residences
190 Meisner Avenue

Opera singer Graham Marr owned this mid-19th century house, which he renamed “Marr Lodge,” from 1925 until his death in 1961 (his partner, landscape painter Norman Robert Morrison, lived here... Learn More

Residences
901 Father Capodanno Boulevard

This commercial building was home to the Beach Haven, Staten Island’s sole lesbian bar in the 1970s and early 1980s. Popular with women’s softball teams, it was the first official... Learn More

Bars, Clubs & Restaurants
130 Stuyvesant Place

Housed in this office building, Richmond College, a division of the CUNY system that later became the St. George campus of the College of Staten Island, was a major center... Learn More

Cultural & Educational Institutions
207 St. Paul's Avenue

Acclaimed Black lesbian feminist, writer, and activist Audre Lorde lived here with her partner, Frances Clayton, and two children from 1972 to 1987. While here, Lorde was a prolific writer... Learn More

Residences
3 Hyatt Street

From at least the late 1950s to the late 1970s, Staten Island’s popular Mayfair Bar & Grill catered to gay patrons. It was one of a few gay and lesbian... Learn More

Bars, Clubs & Restaurants

Other Curated Themes

Transgender History

LGBT-Owned Businesses

Communities of Color

Activism Outside Manhattan

Literary New York

Downtown Arts Scene

City of Immigrants

1970s Lesbian Activism & Community

The Bronx

Brooklyn Heights

Jackson Heights

Why We March

Village Pride Tour

Gay Activists Alliance

The Harlem Renaissance

Jewish New York

Pre-20th Century History

Bars & Nightlife

Activism Before Stonewall

Homophobia & Transphobia

Broadway Theater District

Influential Black New Yorkers

Early Community Centers

Lesbian Life Before Stonewall

The AIDS Crisis

LGBT-Named Public Schools

Art & Architecture

National Register Listings

Spotlight on the Theater