Wide Open Town: A History of Queer San Francisco to 1965. "Polk Street History Project: The Tavern Guild and Imperial Court".
They also helped raise money for people not part of the LGBTQ community, including the United Farm Workers and the Civil Rights Movement, even raising funds to send delegates to Selma. The Tavern Guild helped raise money for many organizations, including the Society for Individual Rights and homophile organizations such as the Mattachine Society and the Daughters of Bilitis. īy 1980 the Guild had at least 184 members and 86 businesses, and gay bar communities in other cities were forming their own versions. Every year at the ball an Empress would be elected to lead newly established Imperial Court System. During the 1965 Ball, José Sarria was named queen of the ball, then declared himself Empress, which became tradition. It was San Francisco's first large public drag ball, beginning in 1963 and continuing well into the 70's. One of the most important events the Tavern Guild sponsored was the annual Halloween drag ball, known as the Beaux Arts Ball. They held Monday night auctions to increase patronage at various bars, hosted annual Election Day Parties as well as an annual picnic in Marin County known for its drinking games and cruising.
Hosted at bars or featuring many drinking activities, these events helped the Guild become a huge financial and political force, one that could push a LGBTQ civil rights agenda and hold sway with politicians. Īs the organization developed from a small group of drinking buddies to a large non-profit charity, the Guild put on many fundraising events. They also set up a loan fund for Guild members that were left unemployed due to police raids and shutdowns, making sure good bartenders stayed employed. One of the first things the Tavern Guild set up was a phone networking system that kept track of police and Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control movements, warning bars that were about to be raided. Showing a unified front also helped keep the police and the California Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC) off their backs, and helped relations between alcohol distributors and Guild bars. In order to bring business to the bars and protect its members, the Guild fixed drink prices so that bars wouldn't compete with each other, as well as monitored and eradicated unsafe business practices and rumormongering (straight bar owners had a habit of marketing themselves as a gay bar if their business was struggling and then turn away homosexuals once their bar was doing better ).
The organization met weekly to discuss the various issues of the gay bar community, including the constant police raids and discrimination. Phil Doganiero, a popular bartender at Suzy Q, was elected the first president of the organization, succeeded by Bill Plath (owner of the D'Oak Room) and Darryl Glied (owner of the Jumpin' Frog) in the following years. The Tavern Guild was founded on a Tuesday night in 1962 at the Suzy-Q, a gay bar on Polk Street.