Just in time for Pride Twin Cities, Preserve Minneapolis is presenting "Queer History: A Tour of Gender and Sexuality in Minneapolis."
The nonprofit, which organizes summer walking and biking tours of historic Minneapolis neighborhoods, turned to Stewart Van Cleve to lead the first-time excursion.
Wise choice.
Van Cleve is the author of "10,000 Loves: A History of Queer Minnesota" (University of Minnesota Press, 2012) and the creator of the just-debuted YesterQueer. The free app — a portable, design-your-own guided tour — is available on IOS and Android devices.
We talked with Van Cleve, who works in library and information sciences for the Metropolitan Council, about the challenges of chronicling lesbian, gay bisexual and transgender (LGBT) history, the gay side of the long-demolished Gateway District and how the city has reinvented itself.
Q: Are you basing the tour from material in "Land of 10,000 Loves"?
A: It's funny, even though I've been studying and writing about this for years, I still find out these amazing tidbits of information. It's an ongoing puzzle.
I just found out the other day about a restaurant named Richards Treat [in downtown Minneapolis, from 1924 to 1957]. It was owned by two women. They were business partners, and they lived together. You can't tell if the relationship was sexual, but reading their letters, it's so intimate, and it's pretty clear to me that they were a couple.