Longtime Chicago publisher and activist Chuck Renslow dies

courtesy of Windy City Times
CHICAGO — Chuck Renslow, a longtime pillar of the LGBT community in Chicago and around the world, died June 29 after multiple long-term health issues. He was the publisher of Triumph, Mars and Rawhide Male magazines, publications mailed and shared across the country as the earliest ways gay men found each other. He was 87.
Chuck Renslow (courtesy
Windy City Times)

Renslow reigned over a seven-decade empire, starting more than two dozen businesses — bars, discos, photo studios, health clubs, bathhouses, gay magazines and newspapers, hotels, restaurants and bookstores. He fostered organizations and dealt with Mafia and police payoffs, the Chicago Machine, anti-gay government policies, and controversy within the gay community.

The founder of International Mr. Leather, owner of Man’s Country and the Gold Coast bar, publisher of the GayLife newspaper in the 1980s, political activist, and much more was an out business owner since the 1950s. He was a critical contributor to a wide range of political, social, business, health and other causes. 
In the early ‘50s, Renslow founded Kris Studios, one of the earliest and most durable of the physique photography houses. He was an accomplished photographer, including of the ballet. His dance photography is in the Newberry Library dance collection in the Chuck Renslow Dance Photographs collection.
He opened Gold Coast, believed to be the first leather bar in the U.S., in Chicago in 1958. He was the founder of many bars and sex clubs since the ‘60s including Man’s Country, which is still open in the city’s Andersonville neighborhood. 
Renslow had many partners over the years, among them Dom ‘Etienne’ Orejudos, who he was with more than 40 years and, and helped encourage Dom’s work as the artist Etienne.
In 1979, he founded International Mr. Leather, which grew out of his Mr. Gold Coast contest and the experience he had managing A.A.U. physique competitions. When Etienne died, Renslow combined his collection of Eteinne’s art with his own archives from his business and his life. Subsequently, Renslow and Tony DeBlase co-founded the Leather Archives & Museum in 1991. Renslow served as president for many years.
Renslow was inducted into the Chicago LGBT Hall of Fame in 1991 and received dozens of awards from the gay and leather communities. He received The Leather Journal’s lifetime achievement award and a Centurion Award as Leatherman of the Century.
He served on the board of directors of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force and was a U.S. representative to what was known then as the International Lesbian and Gay Association.
Renslow also was involved in newspapers, purchasing GayLife from its founder, Grant Ford, and publishing it for several years, until it folded in 1986.
Renslow was especially active in politics in the ‘70s and ‘80s, as the gay community gained clout. He was the founder of Prairie State Democratic Club in 1980, and they hosted events with top politicians from Chicago and Cook County, and even presidential candidates coming through the area. He pushed for the gay and lesbian civil-rights ordinance when it was first introduced in the City Council in the early ‘70s, and the initial executive order banning discrimination in Chicago city government, as issued by then-Mayor Jane Byrne.
He served as a Democratic Party 43rd Ward precinct captain for eight years, as a candidate for delegate to the 1980 Democratic National Convention (for U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy), and within the 46th and 48th Ward Democratic Organizations.
His other bars and businesses have included the Chicago Eagle, Triumph Health Studios, Sparrows Lounge, Bistro Too, Zolar, The Club Baths, Center Stage and Pyramid.
The Leather Archives & Museum staff and board issued this statement, in part: “As LA&M’s co-founder, Chuck gave deeply and worked with great passion for over 26 years to save the names and faces of Leather, kink, BDSM and fetish people, communities, and history, and he fought to ensure that Leatherfolk were the ones who would ‘tell’ their own stories so that they might better understand and bring enhanced visibility to ‘Leather history.’ As co-founder, longtime president and, most recently, chairman of the board, Chuck has left his mark throughout our institution and touched each of us very deeply. He will be missed.”
Renslow’s life is chronicled in “Leatherman: The Legend of Chuck Renslow,” by Tracy Baim, publisher of the Windy City Media Group, and Owen Keehnen.
For more information about Renslow, including a video interview, go to http://chicagogayhistory.org/biography.html?id=772
IN THE NEWS
Volume 19
Issue 4

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