The historical marker recognizing Summit Station, Ohio鈥檚 longest-running lesbian bar, has come down .
Julia Applegate, who helped organize the effort to recognize the historic bar, said the marker was damaged Saturday night.
Surveillance video from what is now Summit Music Hall shows a man slapping the marker as he passes. The sign snaps at the base and falls, apparently startling him and his dog. The man kept walking.
鈥淯ntil we know more, we are reserving judgment, but of course have to wonder if this was done as an act of homophobia,鈥 Applegate wrote in an email to 星空无限传媒.
Ohio History Connection runs the . Ohio History Connection spokesperson Neil Thompson said the statewide history organization and the Summit Station sign sponsors 鈥 the William G. Pomeroy Foundation, Friends of Summit Station, and Stonewall Columbus 鈥 are looking into why the sign broke and working to get it back up as soon as possible.
Ohio History Connection鈥檚 officially leaves repair costs to the organization listed for 鈥渕aintenance of marker,鈥 but Thompson noted that if the cause was a manufacturing problem, that could change things.
All of Ohio鈥檚 official historical markers have been made at Sewah Studios in Marietta since 1957.
There are over 1,700 historical markers in the state, with at least three in each of Ohio鈥檚 88 counties. Each year, Ohio History Connection places 20 to 30 new markers, which are usually chosen from twice as many applications, Thompson said.
Markers are funded by a combination of grants, private funds and local sponsors.
Summit Station, also known as Jack鈥檚 or Jack鈥檚 A Go Go, was a safe space for lesbians from the 70s until it closed in 2008. Its marker is just recognizing LGBTQ+ history. The other two markers are located in Dayton and Cleveland.