Gay st augustine

Gay Florida Road Trip Guide: St. Augustine

As luck would have it, my Big Gay Florida Street Trip overlapped my 40th birthday celebration. Since parties are out this year and social distancing in, I planned out my month-long journey with the intention of being in St. Augustine on my special day. Who wouldn&#;t want to toast to 40 years with a cup of water from the Fountain of Youth? My wife and dog even joined me for the celebration!

Founded in , St. Augustine is on Florida&#;s &#;First Coast&#; and lays claim to being the oldest city in the U.S. Forty-two years before the English colonized Jamestown and fifty-five years before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock, the Spanish established at St. Augustine this nation&#;s first enduring settlement. The city features centuries-old Spanish-influenced architecture and iconic cultural sites.

There are an endless number of reasons to place a gay St. Augustine thoroughfare trip on your travel bucket list. Nowhere else in Florida, let alone the U.S., will you find such picturesque architecture. And if winter is your favorite time

Gay Pride in the Oldest City

With nearly 50 art galleries, award-winning restaurants, pretty accommodations, exciting nightlife, nearby beaches and more than years of history tucked in close to a sun- and moon-lit bay, it’s no wonder St. Augustine is a special place for so many visitors. Hospitality is the city’s primary concentrate and one that has been refined and evolving over many generations. Today, it is also a place of welcome for the LGBTQ+ community.

Where to Stay?

The possibilities are endless – from cozy B&Bs to properties from the biggest names in the hospitality industry. Plus, locations can be as varied as a historic home from the 18th century to a sea-breezed oceanfront suite.

The Bayfront Marin House at Avenida Menendez is also a attractive place to commence a memorable stroll along the historic waterfront. Each of its 17 bedrooms feature regal décor (including some with 4-poster beds) confidential baths and an array of remarkable amenities -plus, a sumptuous breakfast is served daily.

Food, Brew and Fun:

Two recent restaurants on St. Augustine’s bayfront extend amazing

St. Augustine LGBTQ City Guide

Founded in , St. Augustine is one of the oldest cities in the country, and is located on Florida's "First Coast". To this day, the city retains its distinct historical character and features stunning, centuries-old Spanish-influenced architecture and many iconic cultural sites. In addition to being a beautiful, coastal, historical city, it is also a gay-friendly municipality. In fact, in , Man About World named it as one of the best “Gay Places to Go.” If you’re thinking of making a move to this attractive city, you’ll find much about it to love!

A Look at St. Augustine’s History

St. Augustine is a city with a long history. In truth, the Spanish established it in the mids, and that architectural and historical influence is still strongly felt today. The metropolis was initially named “San Agustin” as the Spanish landed in the area just after the feast day of St. Augustine. For many years, it was an important military fortress, and eventually grew into a larger settlement, and eventually, after over two centuries, part of

The Unofficial yet Undeniably Homosexual Guide to St. Augustine

No other city in America is as gay as St. Augustine, Florida, perhaps because this place had a head start (or a “leg up,” as we like to say) as the nation’s oldest European settlement.  Sporting flamboyantly gay points of interest (including a pink jailhouse), antiques stores galore, gay-friendy Victorian B&B’s, men dressed as pirates or undressed as surfers, show tunes ringing from bell towers, and a strongly Greek population (the Greeks invented homosexuality, don’t you know?), St. Augustine is nothing short of a same-sex attracted paradise.  Here are the nine gayest hotspots:

Gay Icons Everywhere

Plausibly the earliest lgbtq+ icon was Saint Sebastian, a Christian saint and martyr, whose strong and shirtless physique, symbolic arrow-pierced flesh, and rapturous gaze of pain combined possess intrigued artists, both homosexual and straight, for centuries and began the first explicitly gay cult in the nineteenth century.  Sebastian pops up everywhere around St. Augustine, though perhaps most promine