Before It Was Poodle Beach
The best known gay beach in Rehoboth for more than two decades has been
Poodle Beach, at the south end of the city’s boardwalk. Last year, USA
Today even anointed it one of America’s best gay beaches.
What USA Today didn’t mention was the origin of the Poodle Beach
name. Maybe that’s because nobody really knows for sure how it came
about. I like the "two cousins theory" where these two cousins
from Maryland would drive up to the end of the Boardwalk in a big Cadillac
convertible and then bring their poodle dogs onto the beach and set up
camp. Another theory says its because the gay guys sit on the beach, all
coiffed and groomed, much like a poodle. And I’ve heard a redneck
contractor suggest the name stems from the way the gay guys walk around
with their butts in the air, just like a poodle dog.
Until the late 70s, however, Poodle Beach was known as Carpenter’s
Beach—physically it was just beyond the two current Carpenter (du Pont)
houses, down towards Dewey Beach across from Silver Lake. Back in the 30s
and 40s, du Pont heiress and well-known lesbian Louisa Carpenter was said
to have entertained her gay and lesbian and bisexual theatre and Hollywood
friends on the beach in front of the family compound.
Two friends of mine who began visiting Rehoboth back in the mid-70s
tell me there was nothing but beach and sand dunes at Carpenter’s Beach.
None of the big houses you see now. And, no women. Guys would spend the
entire day on the beach, slathering themselves with Hawaiian Tropic
tanning oil or a concoction of baby oil and iodine. You played volleyball
and Frisbee and drank Seabreezes and dropped Quaaludes. Boom boxes blasted
disco music. And everyone wore their RayBan aviator sunglasses.
A Washington Blade article from 1978 talks about Carpenter’s Beach
attracting 300-400 gay guys on a holiday weekend. It also points out that
the Carpenter/du Pont family occasionally throw eggs. I have an eyewitness
report of a well-remembered water balloon incident. A few teenagers were
up on the dunes outside the Carpenter house launching water balloons. A
couple of guys finally stormed up to the house and got into an argument
with the kids and a middle aged blond haired lady about rights to the
beach and the watermark laws. Her response: "Darling, it comes down
to the haves and have nots...we are the haves and you are the nots."
Then she called the teenagers into the house and that was about it.
Carpenter’s Beach was cruisy, of course, but it wasn’t an outdoor
bathouse. The beach was too too public and not private enough.
As its popularity grew, the beach gradually spread out and moved back
towards the Boardwalk. For a year or two it was called "Lazy Gay
Beach" because guys got tired of walking so far from the Boardwalk.
I’ve also been told that gays and lesbians gathered in the 50s on the
beach at the end of Olive and Virginia Streets— very near the Pink Pony,
a well-known bar that catered to gays and lesbians up until its
destruction by the great nor’easter of 1962. The Pleasant Inn, in the
house that now stands at the corner of Olive and Second Streets, had a
word of mouth reputation as a gay-friendly establishment. It had been in
the Ocean block of Virginia Street before it was moved. According to one
old boy I know who began visiting Rehoboth in the early 50s, the gay guys
would play volleyball on the beach and it was a way to meet guys. And, if
you were staying at the Pleasant Inn you didn’t even have to sneak ‘em
into your room. Peck Pleasonton, the somewhat closeted gay owner of the
Inn passed away a few years ago. He and his mother had run the Inn and
were known for their cocktail hour with guests. I’ve even heard that his
mother preferred to rent to gay men because she didn’t get any trouble
out of them.
Gays also frequented the beach at Nomad Village, a now defunct hotel
and bar complex eight miles south of Rehoboth in Bethany Beach, after it
opened in 1960. It catered mainly to those staying at the Nomad hotel and
it attracted some lesbians. I’ve also heard that the beach area just
north of the boardwalk was a place where gay guys had cocktail parties on
the beach—all dressed up in madras shorts and nice shirts.
Rich Barnett is an unabashed gay, liberal, tree-hugging,
whiskey-drinking, Rehoboth cottage-owning story-teller. He's working on a
book and can be reached at