Gay West Village, NYC: Stonewall & the Historic Guide (2026)
The West Village is where gay New York began. Here's the guide to Christopher Street — Stonewall, the oldest bars in the city, and the two great lesbian institutions.
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Subscribe NowThe West Village is where gay New York — and, arguably, the modern LGBTQ+ rights movement — began. This tangle of tree-lined streets in Greenwich Village, centered on Christopher Street and Sheridan Square, is home to the Stonewall Inn, where a police raid on June 28, 1969 sparked the uprising that launched Pride. More than half a century later it's still the historic heart of queer New York: the site of the movement's origin, the oldest bars in the city, and the two great lesbian institutions that have somehow survived.
It's less a late-night dance district than Hell's Kitchen and more a history-and-character crawl — the neighborhood you walk through slowly, drink in one landmark at a time. This guide covers the gay West Village: the bars, the history, and why every gay trip to New York should include a night here.
Pro Tip
The West Village is walkable and the bars are close together — this is the one neighborhood best done as a slow crawl on foot rather than a single destination. It's also the heart of both the Pride March and the Village Halloween Parade routes, so book early if you're visiting for either.
The Stonewall Inn — Where It Began
53 Christopher St · National Monument · The birthplace of Pride
The Stonewall Inn is the most famous gay bar in the world, and it's not a museum piece — it's a working bar with a full week of drag and dancing upstairs. On June 28, 1969, patrons here fought back against a police raid, and the days of protest that followed are widely credited as the spark of the modern LGBTQ+ rights movement. In 2016 the bar and the small park across the street were designated the Stonewall National Monument — the first U.S. national monument dedicated to LGBTQ+ history. Have a drink here, then step across to Christopher Park to see the Gay Liberation Monument.
The Historic Bars
Christopher Street and the blocks around it hold the oldest and most storied gay bars in New York.
- Julius' (159 W 10th St) — one of the oldest gay bars in the city, in a building dating to the 1800s, and the site of the 1966 "Sip-In," a landmark protest against rules barring bars from serving gay patrons.
- Marie's Crisis (59 Grove St) — the beloved show-tunes piano bar, where the whole room sings along to Broadway until last call.
- The Monster (80 Grove St) — a Sheridan Square institution with a piano bar upstairs and a dance floor down.
- Pieces (8 Christopher St) — the rowdy drag bar famous for its nightly game shows and viewing parties.
- The Duplex (61 Christopher St) — NYC cabaret since 1951, with a ticketed theater upstairs and a piano bar down.
Two of the city's best drag rooms — Pieces and Stonewall — are right here; see our guide to drag shows in NYC.
The Lesbian Institutions
The West Village is also home to the two most storied lesbian bars in the country, a few blocks apart:
- Cubbyhole (281 W 12th St) — the tiny, decoration-covered classic, open since 1994.
- Henrietta Hudson (438 Hudson St) — a cornerstone since 1991, one of the last remaining lesbian bars in the U.S., relaunched as "a queer human bar built by lesbians."
Both anchor our guide to lesbian bars in NYC.
History You Can Walk
Beyond Stonewall, the West Village is dense with LGBTQ+ history you can see on foot: Christopher Park and the Gay Liberation Monument, the Sip-In site at Julius', the streets that filled during the 1969 uprising, and the piers along the Hudson that were central to gay New York for decades. It's a neighborhood where the history is on the sidewalk — one of the reasons a slow crawl here beats a big night out.
For the wider scene, the West Village sits just south of Chelsea and Hell's Kitchen; see our guides to the best gay bars in NYC and NYC's gay neighborhoods.
Why is the West Village important to gay history?
It's the birthplace of the modern LGBTQ+ rights movement. The Stonewall Inn on Christopher Street was the site of the June 1969 uprising that sparked Pride, and the neighborhood — now home to the Stonewall National Monument — has been the historic center of gay New York for generations.
What are the best gay bars in the West Village?
The Stonewall Inn (the historic landmark, with nightly drag), Julius' (one of NYC's oldest gay bars), Marie's Crisis (the show-tunes piano bar), The Monster (piano bar and dance floor), Pieces (drag game shows), and The Duplex (cabaret since 1951). Plus the lesbian institutions Cubbyhole and Henrietta Hudson.
Where is the Stonewall Inn?
At 53 Christopher Street in the West Village, at Sheridan Square. The bar and the adjacent Christopher Park make up the Stonewall National Monument — the first U.S. national monument dedicated to LGBTQ+ history, designated in 2016.
Are there lesbian bars in the West Village?
Yes — two of the most storied in the country. Cubbyhole (281 W 12th St), open since 1994, and Henrietta Hudson (438 Hudson St), a cornerstone since 1991 and one of the last remaining lesbian bars in the U.S. They're a few blocks apart and easy to do in one night.
Is the West Village a good place to stay in NYC?
It's a charming, central base right on the Pride and Village Halloween Parade routes, and walkable to Chelsea and downtown — though it's more a history-and-character neighborhood than a late-night dance district. For the densest nightlife, Hell's Kitchen is the classic pick. See our best gay bars in NYC guide to plan.
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Robbie S.
I'm Robbie, the founder of Out x Out. I'm from Minneapolis, though I'm spending 2026 building this community from the road — somewhere between South America and Asia. The idea for Out x Out came from a trip to Berlin, where the gay nightlife calendar was years ahead of ours: you could see not just where to go out, but which night to go — so naturally I wanted that kind of insider info for every city in the US (and beyond... eventually). I'm more of a behind-the-scenes type, but the whole point of this is connection: I'd take one real one over a hundred surface-level ones, and I'm trying to build that for the community, city by city.
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