Gay avenue
Townhomes of Clayton | 114 Gay Avenue, No. 9
The upcoming Townhomes of Clayton, located in Old Towne Clayton with walkability to the best of the neighborhood's dining and attractions, promise the pinnacle in comfortable, high-end living. Each residence will have 10' ceilings on the main level, 3 bedrooms and 3.5 bathrooms with your own private elevator and 2 deeded garage parking spaces. Each building houses 5 townhomes for a classic row house touch, featuring open concept living and dining area with chic kitchen & hearth room with rireplace. Upstairs is your spacious master bedroom and en suite amenities. Each secondary bedroom has its own secret bath. 3rd floor recreation room opens to an exclusive rooftop terrace with outdoor kitchen and fireplace. This additional 278 square feet of outdoor living affords every residence the perfect, private getaway with outstanding views of Downtown Clayton!
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Would you live on Gay Street?
elmwood1
Somewhat comparable to threads on strange street names … I was wondering exactly who lives on those streets that have unusual lane names. Did the designate of the street shape their buying decision, either positively or negatively?
Let’s declare you found the matchless house, and it was on Gay Street – a common street mention in much of the US. Knowing that people might snicker when they heard your address, would you buy a home there?
What about streets with names that sound unattractive by today’s standards, such as female names from the 1920s? Would you choose to buy dwelling on Mildred Lane, Ethel Avenue or Gertrude Street?
What about a street call that is impossible to pronounce, like a nice, 14-letter long Polish road name somewhere in Buffalo?
Finally … let’s say you were relocated to Circleville, Ohio. You found the house of your dreams … on Hitler Highway. Sold?
CrankyAsAnOldMan2
What I want in a house is fairly specific and picky–enough so that if I create the right one, I’m not going to grant the address change my mind.
I confess I’ve seen street names and felt I’d be embarrassed to live there–not ones that were old-fashi
110 S Gay Ave, Panama City, FL 32404
This home: 110 S Male lover Ave
History
The National Gay Task Force, the first national gay rights organization, was established in 1973 with the intention of bringing the LGBT rights movement into the national mainstream of American civil rights. Some of the founders were former Gay Activists Alliance (GAA) members disaffected by that group’s internal squabbles, and included Dr. Bruce Voeller, Barbara Gittings, Frank Kameny, Dr. Howard Brown, Arthur Bell, Ron Gold, Nathalie Rockhill, and Martin Duberman.
The “establishment” nonprofit played a crucial role in helping to draft local gay rights bills across the United States, repeal sodomy laws, and encourage LGBT visibility. Its headquarters from October 1973 to 1986 was on the fifth floor of 80 Fifth Avenue. Renamed the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force in 1985, it moved to Washington, D.C. in 1986. Today it is famous as the National LGBTQ Task Force.
Entry by Jay Shockley, project director (March 2017).
NOTE: Names above in bold indicate LGBT people.
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