Gay bars in cambridge uk

Jack Kenworthy( Queer Travel Veteran )

Queer travel expert Jack Kenworthy turns + town adventures into your instruction for safe, vibrant, and inclusively fabulous global journeys.

Cambridge may be famous for its university and remarkable historical buildings. However, she is also a well-known gay tourist destination for being welcoming and abode to many queer attractions.

Not only does she have several gay bars, but she also plays host to several male lover events each year, including the Pride Festival and the Pink Festival.  With this lively queer collective, you can expect your visit to Cambridge to be filled with a blend of history, identity, and inclusivity. 

Cambridge isn’t just a queer-friendly university city; it is an former English relic with over two thousand years of history. Located along the River Cam and just a short train operate from London, this minute beauty has a population of ,, including many famous names that include lived and worked in Cambridge over the centuries.

You can stop by Cambridge to check out the oldest university in the world, foun

Remembering 14 queer pubs Cambridge has loved and lost

Over the years Cambridge has been home to a number of LGBTQ+ friendly bars and pubs, which many residents will have fond memories of.

In the 80s and 90s, regular haunts for the LGBTQ+ community included staples like The Anchor and Turk's Head.

But sadly, favor many Cambridge venues, they have vanished over time.

Read more: Looking back at the damage caused by the infamous Great Storm of '87

The city still holds several monthly gay nights including Glitterbomb at Vinyl, and the Dot Cotton Club, though it's without a home, still puts on events.

We asked you to distribute your memories from Cambridge's queer pubs that we possess loved and lost.

Inundated with pictures and anecdotes from years gone by we decided to position them into a nostalgic list for you to enjoy.

Janie Buchanan, a long-term member of womxn loving womxn group Sisters Operate commented: "The pubs were essential because of the town and gown divide.

"All the colleges had their queer societies and reading groups and we had no access to those. The pub

LGBT+ Sports Club Finder

That’s club as in nightclub, not football club. You don’t need to be ‘a member’, wear a particular kit or have any particular skill for bowling. So there are no pre-requisites for attendance.

We were founded in by newlyweds Marc & Luke — who had just moved to Manchester, and had no idea how to make friends in a new city. They invited the few people they knew to come bowling one Wednesday, and extended the invite to friends-of-friends. The rest, as they tell, is history.

In the years since, we’ve expanded our presence to cities across the UK, helped forge hundreds of new friendships, and proudly represented the UK at international LGBTQ+ ten-pin tournaments across Europe.

It turns out, gender non-conforming people everywhere need a way of making new friends.

If you’re one of them, we’d admire to meet you sometime.

Love and pins,

Team GCB x

P.S. Don’t enable the name fool you - everyone from across the rainbow is welcome, not just homosexual men. It was just too good a wordplay to resist.



How Cambridge’s queer music scene finally came out

Coming to Cambridge from England’s same-sex attracted capital (Manchester, obviously), I feared my beloved gay music would be disoriented among ‘Gold Dust’, ‘Titanium’, and whatever other s track Rumboogie has on replay. My first late hours out proved me erroneous. While Lola’s drip-fed me Dua Lipa once in a blue moon, Glitterbomb overflowed with gay classics. It offered a room to soak in Britney and Beyoncé without having to tone down my singalong. Yet in my three years, Cambridge’s homosexual scene has come a long way, now offering far more than cheesy 00s pop.

At that point, Glitterbomb was Cambridge’s only frequent queer event, but allegations of racist staff meant many students needed a new home for their queer anthems. This was the origin story of The Queer Get Down. Hosted at Mash, QGD was founded “to build a safer space … for queer people of colour by queer people of colour”. These were the words of QGD’s organisers, who told me how important music is for queer identities. “It’s about feeling comfortable in your own skin. Homosexual artists have made musi