Gay Chicago

Gay Chicago
PublisherDane Tidwell
First issue1976; 48 years ago (1976)
Final issueSeptember 21, 2011; 12 years ago (2011-09-21)

Gay Chicago is a defunct LGBT online news organization in Chicago, Illinois, which ceased publishing in print form on September 21, 2011. [1]

Gay Chicago replaced Gay Chicago Magazine which was founded in 1976 by Ralph Paul Gernhardt and published under the former Gernhardt Publications.[2] It was a weekly LGBT news and entertainment publication. It started as a pocket-sized publication but in 1988 was enlarged to tabloid format. Gay Chicago News was also published in 1977. Craig Gernhardt holds all the archives of every edition since 1976, including over 200,000 photos of the LGBT community from 1976 to 2001, when digital became the wave of the future. Most of the archived rare photos have never been seen by the public.

Under the leadership of Ralph Paul Gernhardt, the former magazine sponsored the Gay Games and local gay sporting teams. On March 2, 2011, Gay Chicago Magazine reorganized as an Illinois not-for-profit corporation, Gay Chicago Foundation,[3] and transitioned from an entertainment publication to the weekly newsmagazine Gay Chicago. The new publication was no longer published by the company founded by Ralph Paul Gernhardt.

In July 2011 Dane Tidwell took over as managing publisher, handling day-to-day operations. In August 2011 Tidwell purchased 50% shares in Gay Chicago for an undisclosed amount.

In mid-September 2011, Dane Tidwell announced that the magazine would become a biweekly, and on September 29, 2011, Craig Gernhardt announced it had suspended print publication altogether.[4] With the halt of printing of Gay Chicago, the Windy City Times becomes Chicago's only LGBT newsweekly in print form. [5]

Gay Chicago Magazine won several community leadership awards, including being inducted to the Chicago Gay and Lesbian Hall of Fame in 1991.[6]

References

  1. ^ Windy City Times [1] "Windy City Times"
  2. ^ Tracy Baim [2] "Out & Proud in Chicago"
  3. ^ "CyberDrive Illinois", 'File Number 67795105
  4. ^ ""Windy City Times"". 5 October 2011. Retrieved 30 September 2014.
  5. ^ "Windy City Times"
  6. ^ "Chicago Gay & Lesbian Hall of Fame website". Retrieved 30 September 2014.

External links

  • Gay Chicago Foundation[permanent dead link]
  • Windy City Times
  • ChicagoPride.com Archived 2010-12-05 at the Wayback Machine
  • v
  • t
  • e
1990–1999
1991
  • Ortez Alderson
  • Jon-Henri Damski
  • James W. Flint
  • Gay Chicago
  • Renee C. Hanover
  • Howard Brown Health Center
  • Judith S. Johns
  • Carol A. Johnson
  • William B. Kelley
  • Marie J. Kuda
  • Chuck Renslow
  • Adrienne J. Smith
  • Max C. Smith
  • Richard B. Turner
1992
1993
1994
  • Robert J. Adams
  • Tracy Baim
  • George S. Buse
  • James A. Bussen
  • Lori Cannon
  • John Chester
  • Chicago House and Social Service Agency
  • Samuel F. Davis Jr.
  • Adrienne J. Goodman
  • Earnest E. Hite Jr.
  • Bruce Koff
  • Ellis B. Levin
  • Lionheart Gay Theatre Company
  • Open Hand Chicago
  • Gregory A. Sprague
  • Elizabeth E. Tocci
  • Steven F. Wakefield
1995
1996
1997
  • Toni Armstrong Jr.
  • Miguel Ayala
  • Roger Chaffin
  • James C. Darby
  • Dignity Chicago
  • Ida Greathouse
  • John Hammell
  • Rick Karlin
  • Corinne J. Kawecki
  • Larry McKeon
  • David G. Ostrow
  • Mary Ann Smith
1998
1999
2000–2009
2000
2001
2002
  • Affinity Community Services
  • Evette Cardona
  • C. C. Carter
  • Jim Gates (Chicago businessman)
  • Louis I. Lang
  • Mattachine Midwest
  • NAMES Project Chicago Chapter
  • Charles Edward Nelson II
  • Mona Noriega
  • Christina Smith
  • Lauren Sugerman
2003
  • Angel Abcede
  • About Face Theatre
  • AIDS Legal Council of Chicago
  • Buddies' Restaurant and Bar
  • Tania Callaway
  • Armand R. Cerbone
  • Chicago Black Lesbians and Gays
  • R. Sue Connolly
  • Bon Foster
  • The Graham Family
  • Tonda L. Hughes
  • Patricia M. Logue
  • John Pennycuff
  • Laurence E. Spang
  • Sheron Denise Webb
  • Albert N. Williams
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010–2019
2010
2011
  • Paul Adams
  • Greg Cameron
  • Antonia Flores
  • Grant Lynn Ford
  • Robert Garofalo
  • Good Shepherd Parish Metropolitan Community Church
  • Ted Grady
  • Marcia Hill
  • Tony Jackson
  • Jenner & Block LLP
  • Lakeside Pride Music Ensembles
  • The Night Ministry
  • Brett Shingledecker
  • Jon Simmons
2012
  • Lois L. Bates
  • Chi-Town Squares
  • Chicago Black Gay Men's Caucus
  • St. Sukie de la Croix
  • Sanford E. Gaylord
  • William W. Greaves
  • Keith R. Green
  • Mark Ishaug
  • David Orr
  • Proud to Run, Chicago
  • Bill Pry
  • Chuck Rodocker
  • Heather C. Sawyer
  • Laura S. Washington
  • Honey West
2013
2014
2015
  • Jean Albright
  • Fred Eychaner
  • Emmanuel Garcia
  • Stanley Jencyzk
  • Lesbian and Gay Police Association
  • Gay Officers Action League
  • Phoenix Matthews
  • Gail Morse
  • Michael O'Connor
  • Jan Schakowsky
  • Barbara Smith
  • Camilla B. Taylor
  • Lauren Verdich
2016
2017
2020–2029
2020
2021
  • Ginni Clemmens
  • Lisa Isadora Cruz
  • Lana Hostetler
  • Thomas Hunt (activist)
  • Wayne Johnson (graphic designer)
  • Otis Mack
  • PrideChicago
  • Ralphi Rosario
  • Betty Lark Ross
  • Urban Pride
  • Kirk Williamson
    2022
  • Maya Green
  • Zahara Monique Bassett
  • Matthew Harvat
  • Paul Highfield
  • Thomas (T.L.) Noble
  • Joey Soloway
  • Dan Wolf (Chicago)
  • Windy City Performer Arts
  • Outspoken (Chicago)
  • Homocore Chicago
  • Patty the Pin Lady
  • Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center
  • Season of Concern Chicago