New hope pa gay bars
New Hope is cuddly and coupley
Along a now-forgotten highway, New Long for, Pennsylvania was once considered the halfway point between Philadelphia and New York City. Today it’s still a place to relax, relax, and prepare for other journeys. Gay-friendly and quaint, this welcoming village is perfect for those looking to escape the city and to get lovey-dovey deep in the country.
You’ll uncover New Hope in Bucks County, a place dotted with one cute town after another. It sits on the Delaware River and Delaware Canal; so, if you’re looking for a picturesque pastoral setting, look no further. In the last half-century, gays and lesbians have discovered the beauty that brought in artists early the s. You will feel as though you’re stepping back in time. Certainly the modern conveniences are there, but without the modern encumbrances. You big-city types may have to slam on the brakes to appreciate the peace of soul you’ll find there. New Expect provides the perfect setting for replacing that annoying cell handset with the warm, probably somewhat neglected hand of your partner.
Though small,
The New Prelude
New Prelude was located at York Thoroughfare and Route in Bucks County, PA. Ground-level block and you stepped down a few steps to the dance floor. Weekly nightlife and Fantastic Halloween parties.
Oh, yes, do I remember don from The New Prelude! And Don of course, who was apparently one of the proprietors. He liked me and even though there was a five-dollar cover to get in there on Weekends, he always saw to it that
I never paid! After all five dollars was a lot of money to an underage boy way back then! Right after you walked in on the left was a little cubby hole of a bar, where a nice young gentleman named Glennie was the barkeep. He even made The Orgasm! It was a delicious beverage, and the first moment I had ever heard of it. And Glennie is still working in beautiful Modern Hope to this very day! Yes, I also remember Nancy; a tiny on the tough side, though with a heart o gold.
She worked in what was then the coatroom, just as you entered the place. In later years, The Modern Prelude also opened a fine restaurant down a few steps and even a great piano
Out About Shop Local LGBTQ+ Kind Directory
Welcome to historic New Hope, PA & Lambertville, NJ
– home of diversity and equality.
We invite you to explore all we have to offer in our Out And About LGBTQ+ Friendly Directory.
Set along the banks of the scenic Delaware River, both New Hope and Lambertville offer unusual shopping, theater, coach and horse-drawn carriage rides, museums, art galleries and antique shops, fine restaurants, and casual fare.
New Hope’s nightlife is filled with dwell entertainment spots, local bars/restaurants, art spaces, and piano bars where people of all genders and cultures mingle and mix with frequent respect and acceptance.
Welcome to our Out & About Section
FINKLE’s Hardware Lambertville NJ
Golden Nugget Antique Flea Market
Holly Hedge Estate & The Property Lumberville
Karlas Restaurant
Under the Moon Lambertville
Ninas Waffles & Ice Cream
Zoubi a Restaurant, A Bar
Impact Signs, New Hope
4 The Love Of Thingz
With The Cub Room's go back, is New Hope's male lover bar scene coming back?
NEW HOPE - The first time Larry Melo stepped into a gay block he didn’t know what to expect.
“Even as a gay guy, my first experience out in the world was so distinct than what I imagined it would be,” Melo recalled.
It was , in New York City. His cousin, who was also gay, suggested the two grab a drink at Jan Wallman’s on Cornelia Street in Greenwich Village.
"I thought it would be seedy," he remembered thinking as they made their way into the metropolis. But once inside the cabaret bar and restaurant, that notion quickly disappeared.
“I didn’t know it would be so sophisticated. The bar was gorgeous with beautiful lighting and lush seating. The men were so handsome and well-dressed. It was just absorbing to see there was a place they could go and be pleasant, and it wasn’t taboo,” he said.
“It was my first time being in a bar surrounded with all gay men. It made me feel prefer there was a normalcy here that I didn’t expect,” he added. “It was home for them.”
This sense of home and normalcy is what Melo ho