KG Club explained

KG Club
Address:200 Karangahape Road
Location:Auckland
Type:Lesbian club
Closed:1985

The KG Club (Karangahape Road Girls' Club or Kamp Girls' Club) was a prominent community centre in Auckland, Aotearoa/New Zealand. It was known as one of New Zealand's first lesbian clubs.[1]

History

The KG Club was founded in 1972 by a group of women including Raukura Te Aroha "Bubs" Hetet. In a later interview, Hetet noted that there was a prominent lesbian community in Auckland at the time, but they lacked a space to congregate. Consequently, the KG Club was formed.[2]

The KG Club was originally located on Karangahape Road in a building previously used as a hair salon. However, the club subsequently relocated multiple times due to ongoing financial and liquor licensing issues.[3] After vacating 200 Karangahape Road, the KG club moved to various sites including Saint Kevin's Arcade, Beach Road and Albert Street.[4]

At the time, New Zealand law prevented women from obtaining liquor licenses. This meant that much of the trading carried out by the KG Club was illegal and the premises were subject to several police raids.[5] One particular raid in 1978 led to the closure of the Beach Road site. Viot notes that restrictive licensing policies such as these were partially responsible for the club nearing liquidation in 1979.

The KG Club was generally volunteer-operated and hosted a range of community events and workshops. These included training classes for women, unofficial weddings, film and music events, as well as discussions on important matters such as racism, parenting and issues faced by Māori and Pacific people. Despite being a supportive founding member, Hetet expressed disappointment in the strict 'women-only' policy adopted at times by the KG Club, and its subsequent exclusion of many of her queer friends who were not women.

The club closed in 1985.[1] The Charlotte Museum Te Whare Takatāpuhi-Wāhine o Aotearoa, a lesbian history museum in Auckland, takes its name from two former members of the KG Club, Charlotte Prime and Charlotte Smith.[6]

References

  1. Web site: Laurie . Alison . 5 May 2011 . Lesbian lives - Early meeting places . 11 December 2023 . Te Ara.
  2. Laurie . Alison . 2010 . "We Were the Town's Tomboys": An Interview with Raukura: "Bubs" Hetet . Journal of Lesbian Studies . 14 . 4 . 381–400. 10.1080/10894161003677091 .
  3. Web site: Voit . Frederike . 30 April 2023 . "This was Paradise": The Rise of Queer Public Spaces in Central Auckland . 11 December 2023 . Auckland History Initiative.
  4. McCabe . Micheal . 2017 . Tracing steps on an empty dance floor, or, nightclubs as queer spaces . Thesis . University of Auckland . 11 December 2023.
  5. Buxton . Sarah . 2020 . That was then, this is now: Identity in the Auckland lesbian community . Women's Studies Journal . 34 . 1 . 59–67.
  6. Web site: Charlotte Museum Trust . Miriam . Saphira . NZHistory . 11 December 2023.