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The Club was founded in 1965 by John "Jack" W. Campbell (born 1932) and two other investors who paid $15,000 to buy a closed Finnish bath house in Cleveland, Ohio. Campbell wanted to provide cleaner, brighter amenities that were a contrast to the dark, dirty environment that existed previously. [2]
The Chicago Fun Club, [169] a non-landed social nudist club [170] [171] The Den off Eastlake in Chicago, a male-only bed and breakfast [ 172 ] Nude Dudes Chicago is a group of 18- to 40-year-old gay men who host public nudity related events in the Chicago area.
Peebles moved to Miami, [67] Florida, in 1998 and then to Coral Gables in 2001. He had homes in Coral Gables and New York City, but sold his Coral Gables house in 2021 for $13 million. [68] [69] He currently lives in Miami Beach, Florida, Sag Harbor, NY and New York City with his wife Katrina, a former PR executive, whom he married in 1992.
Man's Country/Chicago was the third bathhouse co-founded by Chuck Renslow—a pioneering figure in Chicago's gay community—whose previous two clubs were forced to shut down due to homophobia-fueled pressure from the police. [2] Before opening Man's Country/Chicago, Renslow co-founded a Chicago location of the Club Baths chain with Chuck Fleck ...
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Quincy Woman's Club: Old Washington Lodge No. 2 300 North Calhoun Street Quincy, Gadsden County: March 10, 1975: Sarasota Woman's Club: Florida State Theatre 1241 North Palm Avenue Sarasota, Sarasota County: January 18, 1985: St. Petersburg Woman's Club: 40 Snell Isle Boulevard St. Petersburg, Pinellas County: July 15, 1994: Woman's Club of Starke
Club La Vela was a nightclub owned by Patrick and Thorsten Pfeffer located in Panama City Beach, Florida. It was once billed as the largest nightclub in the United States . The club gained most of its fame and infamy in the 1990s during the weeks of spring break when thousands of college students converge on the club.
2010: Historic Church Street Station RR FRISCO 0-6-0 Switcher #3749 Locomotive, which had been on display for many years at the station, is acquired by the City of Orlando and put up for sale. [68] 2012: RR FRISCO 0-6-0 Switcher Locomotive #3749 is donated by the City of Orlando and relocated to the Florida Railroad Museum facility in Parrish. [57]