1979

COC above ground

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In 1979, COC Utrecht moved into its own building at 221 Oudegracht. For years, it was buzzing with activities (mixed and separate for women) and the meeting center evenings were well attended. In the nineties, COC ran into financial problems and had to sell its building in 2007. Today, COC Midden-Nederland is again a stable organization that focuses mainly on advocacy and support for vulnerable LGBTQIA+.

 

Opening with demonstration

After an extensive renovation - to a design by well-known Utrecht architect Mart van Schijndel - Mayor Vonhoff (VVD) opened the COC's new premises on Saturday 31 March 1979. The Oudegracht 221 building had a spacious entrance with a counter and a quiet seating area, a large wharf cellar with bar and dance floor and a separate meeting room on the first floor.

During the festive week, COC organized the first gay demonstration in Utrecht (past the Saturday shoppers in the city center to Domplein (cathedral square). Other notable program elements included a football match (with drinks afterwards) against the nearby Centre for Working Youth (to build a good relationship with potential troublemakers), an evening about gay history, a reception for welfare workers and a book exhibition in the public library. After almost 30 years, COC Utrecht was above ground for the first time. It took some getting used to for some Utrecht residents. In the first year, the windows were smashed several times and replaced by artificial glass.

 

Dozens of active members

The department flourished like never before in the early 1980s. Dozens of members were active in working groups that kept the meeting centre running four evenings a week. Working group members introduced new COC members and guided them in discussion groups (men and women separately). Others provided help or wrote the department magazine Seku (later Pension Parkzicht) full. A working group provided information to diverse groups (e.g. schoolchildren, housewives, police officers and psychology students). Others represented the Utrecht association at national COC congresses. Monthly, representatives of all these groups met in the working group council where sometimes heated discussions took place on whether or not to take action, how to deal with aggressive visitors and the right to exist of a working group of atheist faggots (WAF).

 

Saturday women's night

More than ever, women literally and figuratively demanded and were given space within the COC, although it was not without controversy. Saturday night became women's night after fierce debates and an extra members' meeting. That was initially a success, which was not the case for the barely used women's 'darkroom' on the first floor. In addition to a mixed board, the section was given a women's consultation from 1982, a structure that would last for 10 years.

 

Torchlight procession

The eighties were also characterized by the many actions that took place. Utrecht fags and pots were present in large numbers during the Pink Saturday in 1982 in Amersfoort. There, the demonstrators were harassed by aggressive young people, while many elderly people were verbally abusive. The events in Amersfoort led to new political awareness and ultimately to a broad government policy against discrimination and violence. The first 'Roze Zaterdag (Pink Saturday, National Pride Day) took place in Utrecht in 1986, while a year later, on the initiative of the COC women’s group ‘Pot op’ (an alliteration for dike, fuck off and hoard) and others, a torchlight procession was organized to the palace of Roman Catholic Cardinal Simonis on the Maliebaan. He had said in an interview that a Catholic landlord was allowed to evict a homosexual tenant.

 

Financial problems

In the nineties, COC Utrecht ran into financial problems due to declining bar income – there was now a lot of competition from De Roze Wolk, Pann and other gay bars – rising rent debts and financial mismanagement. The purchase of another, less expensive property failed and the plan to set up a Pink House in collaboration with the municipality and other organizations also failed. The Oudegracht 221 building was sold in 2007 and since then COC activities have taken place at various locations.

 

New stability

Meanwhile, in 2000, the national COC had changed from an association into a federation of autonomous local and regional groups. COC Utrecht merged with COC ‘t Gooi to COC Midden-Nederland. In 2025, the thriving organization celebrated its 75th anniversary. She nowadays focuses on advocacy and support for vulnerable LHBTQI+, e.g. young people, the over-50s, women, refugees and people with a disability.

 

Maurice van Lieshout

 

Sources

 

Maurice van Lieshout, ‘Cultuur, ontspanning en confrontatie. De eerste dertig jaar van het Utrechtse COC, 1950-1979’, Tijdschrift Oud-Utrecht 92 (2019) 3, 106-112.

Mariska van der Steege en Wanda Zoet (samenstelling en redactie), Durfteleven. Zestig jaar geschiedenis van het COC Utrecht (Utrecht 2010).

https://cocmiddennederland.nl/

Read more about the dramatic national Pride Day (Roze Zaterdag) in Amersfoort in 1982: Maurice van Lieshout. ‘De slag om het Lieve Vrouwekerkhof. De Roze Zaterdag in Amersfoort, 26 juni 1982, Tijdschrift Oud-Utrecht 83 (2010) 3, 92-97.

Latest update of this window: February 21, 2025

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