Everard Baths

Bath house in New York City, United States
40°44′43″N 73°59′21″W / 40.7454°N 73.9892°W / 40.7454; -73.9892Opened1888 (1888)Renovated1977ClosedApril 1986 (1986-04)Other informationFacilitiesprivate rooms, wet and dry steamrooms, pool

The Everard Baths or Everard Spa Turkish Bathhouse was a gay bathhouse at 28 West 28th Street in New York City that operated from 1888 to 1986. The venue occupied an adaptively reused church building and was the site of a deadly fire.

History

Everard Baths was a Turkish bath founded by financier James Everard in 1888 in a former church building, designed in a typical late-nineteenth-century Victorian Romanesque Revival architectural style. James Everard who operated the Everard brewery on 135th Street converted it to a bathhouse in 1888. Everard's bathhouse was intended for general health and fitness.[1]

On November 28, 1898, a soldier was found dead in his room at the baths and gas was suspected.[2][3]

On January 5, 1919, the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice encouraged a police raid in which the manager and nine customers were arrested for lewd behavior. It was raided again in 1920 with 15 arrests.[4]

It was patronized largely by homosexuals by the 1920s and became the community's preeminent social venue from the 1930s onward.[5] It was patronized by gay men before the 1920s and by the 1930s had a reputation as "classiest, safest, and best known of the baths," eventually picking up the nickname "Everhard".[6]

The entrance was lit by two green lamps, giving it, according to patrons, the appearance of a police precinct, and giving rise to speculation that it was owned for a period by the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association of the City of New York (a claim that was vehemently denied after patrons died in a 1977 fire).

Emlyn Williams described a visit in 1927:

Up some stairs at a desk an ashen bored man in shirtsleeves produced a ledger crammed with illegible scrawls. I added mine, paid my dollar, was handed a key, towel and robe, hung the key on my wrist and mounted to a large floor as big as a warehouse and as high: intersecting rows of private rooms each windowless cell dark except from the glimmer from above through wire-netting shredded with dust and containing a narrow workhouse bed...[he later heard] a casual whisper, a sigh lighter than thistle-down, a smothered moan. Then appeasement: the snap of a lighter as two strangers sat back for a smoke and polite murmured small talk, such as they might exchange in a gym.[2]

Among the documented patrons were Alfred Lunt, Clifton Webb, Noël Coward, Lorenz Hart, Truman Capote, Charles James, Gore Vidal and Rudolf Nureyev.[7] Truman Capote and Ned Rorem wrote about their visits.[8]

On May 25, 1977, nine patrons (ages 17 to 40) were killed in a fire: seven from smoke inhalation, one from respiratory burns, and one who had jumped from an upper floor. Contributing factors were the deteriorating conditions and the lack of sprinklers.[9] Firefighters said they were thwarted in rescue efforts by paneling covering the windows. Between 80 and 100 patrons left the building; the indefinite number was because the club did not have registration at the time. Most of the victims were identified by friends rather than family.[10] Accounts said costs were $5 for a locker or $7 for a cubicle ($6 and $9.25 on weekends).[11]

Despite total destruction of the top two floors, the two floors were rebuilt, and the baths reopened.[12] However, it was closed in April 1986 by New York City mayor Ed Koch during the city's campaign to close such venues during the AIDS epidemic.[9]

Popular culture

Michael Rumaker wrote a book A Day and a Night at the Baths, devoted totally to the baths.[13]

The bathhouse is described in the novels Dancer from the Dance by Andrew Holleran,[14] Faggots by Larry Kramer, and Now Voyagers by James McCourt.

The bathhouse is the subject of Goodbye Seventies by Todd Verow.[15]

References

  1. ^ J. Russiello, A Sympathetic Planning Hierarchy for Redundant Churches: A Comparison of Continued Use and Reuse in Denmark, England and the United States of America] (MSc Conservation of Historic Buildings, University of Bath, 2008), p.383.
  2. ^ a b Colter, Ephen Glenn; Bedfellows, Dangerous (1996), Ephen Glenn Colter; Dangerous Bedfellows (eds.), Policing public sex: queer politics and the future of AIDS activism, South End Press, ISBN 978-0-89608-549-7
  3. ^ "Ex-Soldier Killed by Gas" (PDF). Baltimore and Ohio Southwestern. 29 November 1898.
  4. ^ Chauncey, George (1994). Gay New York: Gender, Urban Culture, and the Making of the Gay Male World, 1890–1940. New York: Basic Books.
  5. ^ (Stein 2004, p. 90)
  6. ^ (Miller 1995, p. 143)
  7. ^ McCourt, James (2004), Queer street: rise and fall of an American culture, 1947-1985 : excursions in the mind of the life, W.W. Norton, ISBN 978-0-393-05051-6
  8. ^ Plimpton, George (1997), Truman Capote: in which various friends, enemies, acquaintances, and detractors recall his turbulent career, Nan A. Talese/Doubleday, ISBN 978-0-385-23249-4
  9. ^ a b Scott Bronstein, "4 New York Bathhouses Still Operate Under City's Program of Inspections," The New York Times (3 May 1987).
  10. ^ 9 Killed in Bath Fire Identified by Friends - New York Times - May 27, 1977
  11. ^ "History of Gay Bars in New York City: The Everard Baths at 28 West 28th Street". Archived from the original on 2008-12-04. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
  12. ^ "Everard Baths". Archived from the original on 2008-12-04. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
  13. ^ A Day and a Night at the Baths by Michael Rumaker Grey Fox Press (1979) ISBN 0-912516-44-5
  14. ^ Holleran, Andrew (2001), Dancer from the dance: a novel (reprint ed.), Perennial, ISBN 978-0-06-093706-5
  15. ^ Goodbye Seventies

Works cited

  • Miller, Neil (1995), Out of the Past, Gay and Lesbian history from 1869 to the present, Vintage Books, ISBN 9780679749882
  • Stein, Marc (2004), Encyclopedia of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History in America, Charles Scribner's Sons, ISBN 9780684312620
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