The Gay Crowd – Weekly Sobriety Support Meeting
Club 164 2016 Industrial Dr, Annapolis, MDThe Gay Crowd : Every Sat 5:45 pm Club 164 - A Sober Lounge https://www.club164.org/ 2016 Industrial Drive, Annapolis In Person LGBT Big Book study.
The Gay Crowd : Every Sat 5:45 pm Club 164 - A Sober Lounge https://www.club164.org/ 2016 Industrial Drive, Annapolis In Person LGBT Big Book study.
An 1870s lesbian gunslinger. Extravagant 1930s drag balls. Mass protests of the 1980s and 1990s. All are a part of our story. In 2018, Preservation Maryland engaged in a project to create the first comprehensive study of LGBTQ+ history and historic preservation across Maryland. In conducting the research for this project, Ben Egerman was able to identify a wide
The Gay Crowd : Every Sat 5:45 pm Club 164 - A Sober Lounge https://www.club164.org/ 2016 Industrial Drive, Annapolis In Person LGBT Big Book study.
SYT is back for an 8th year of stopping the stigma of mental illness through words & art. We'll again have live performances with "Speakers" of all varities (e.g., poets, singers, comics, etc.). Click for more info on being a "Speaker." New this year is a deluxe, large vendor space with dedicated hours before the
The Gay Crowd : Every Sat 5:45 pm Club 164 - A Sober Lounge https://www.club164.org/ 2016 Industrial Drive, Annapolis In Person LGBT Big Book study.
The Gay Crowd : Every Sat 5:45 pm Club 164 - A Sober Lounge https://www.club164.org/ 2016 Industrial Drive, Annapolis In Person LGBT Big Book study.
The Gay Crowd : Every Sat 5:45 pm Club 164 - A Sober Lounge https://www.club164.org/ 2016 Industrial Drive, Annapolis In Person LGBT Big Book study.
The Gay Crowd : Every Sat 5:45 pm Club 164 - A Sober Lounge https://www.club164.org/ 2016 Industrial Drive, Annapolis In Person LGBT Big Book study.
The Gay Crowd : Every Sat 5:45 pm Club 164 - A Sober Lounge https://www.club164.org/ 2016 Industrial Drive, Annapolis In Person LGBT Big Book study.
For as long as there has been a place called Maryland, there have been people whom we would today see as fitting within the LGBTQ+ community. As cities grew in the 19th century, newspapers began to offer tantalizing clues that all was not straight and narrow and that LGBTQ+ people were becoming more visible, finding