The school's executive director, Wayne Kramer, referred to the student handbook, which stated: "Lutheran High North reserves the right, within its sole discretion, to refuse admission of an applicant and/or to discontinue enrollment of a current student participating in, promoting, supporting or condoning: pornography, sexual immorality, homosexual activity or bisexual activity". In February 2015 a 17-year-old gay student at Lutheran High School North reported that the school forced him to leave since he refused to take down YouTube videos discussing his sexuality. Well, guess what? There's nowhere we're not welcome anymore." The suburbs especially attracting gays are Pearland, Sugar Land, and Missouri City. Hill stated that "Gay bars used to be places where we had to go to get refuge because we were not welcome anywhere else. Decentralization of Houston's LGBT population with the increasing LGBT acceptance in the city caused business at gay bars in Montrose to decline. By 2011 many LGBT people moved to the Houston Heights and to suburbs in Greater Houston, and according to Hill, possibly less than 8% of Montrose's population was LGBT. By 2009 some were also moving to Riverside Terrace. In the 2000s many LGBT individuals began moving to Westbury and several began referring to it as "Little Montrose". Paul Broussard was murdered in Montrose in 1991. and in 1990, according to Hill, 19% of the residents of Montrose were LGBT. By 1985, the flavor and politics of the neighborhood were heavily influenced by the LGBT community. Within Montrose, new gay bars began to open. LGBT community members were attracted to Montrose as a neighborhood after encountering it while patronizing Art Wren, and they began to gentrify the neighborhood and assist the widows with the maintenance of their houses. They began going to Art Wren, a 24-hour restaurant in Montrose, a community of empty nesters and widows. Gays and lesbians needed to have a place to socialize after the closing of the gay bars. ContentsĪccording to Ray Hill, a Montrose resident quoted in the Houston Press, before the 1970s, the city's gay bars were spread around Downtown Houston and what is now Midtown Houston. Houston has the largest LGBT population of any city in the state of Texas. Houston has a large and diverse LGBT population and is home to the 4th largest gay pride parade in the nation. LGBT rainbow banners in Montrose, Houston WikiMili LGBT culture in Houston Last updated April 30, 2022