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Chris Dawkins founded the Denver Wrangler around 1997 at 1700 Logan Street in North Capitol Hill, near the border of Uptown. The bar quickly became the center of Denver's bear and leather community — a population that had few dedicated spaces in the Mountain West.
The Wrangler's interior featured rotating photos of beefy men, leather-clad bartenders, a dance floor, a game room, and a patio. The aesthetic was deliberate and unapologetic: this was a bar built for a specific community, and it made no effort to broaden its appeal beyond that base. LGBTQ+ Denver Guide
The Sunday Beer Bust became the Wrangler's signature event almost immediately after opening. For $10, patrons received all-you-can-drink beer alongside a BBQ spread. The event ran continuously from 1997 through the bar's closure in 2018, raising thousands of dollars for local charities over that span.
The Beer Bust functioned as more than a drink special. It was a weekly gathering point for a community that often lacked institutional spaces, and for many regulars it served as the primary social anchor of their week. Denver LGBTQ+ Bars and Clubs
In August 2016, the Wrangler relocated to 3090 Downing Street — a 13,000-square-foot former church that Dawkins purchased for $2.38 million. The new space was dramatically larger, with multiple rooms and a different layout than the intimate Logan Street original.
The move proved fatal. The Wrangler closed permanently on June 25, 2018, just 22 months after the relocation. The larger space required more revenue to sustain, and the new location lacked the foot traffic and neighborhood integration that had sustained the Logan Street bar for two decades.
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The Wrangler's legacy is complicated by its "gender-matching" ID policy, which required patrons' IDs to match their presenting gender appearance. The policy effectively discriminated against transgender people and cisgender women alike. In 2014, Colorado regulators ruled that the policy constituted discrimination after a man was denied entry while in drag.
Dawkins issued a formal apology in September 2017 after partnering with the Matthew Shepard Foundation on inclusivity training. The controversy raised broader questions about exclusion within LGBTQ+ spaces — who is welcome, who decides, and what obligations a community bar has to the full community it claims to represent.
The national leather bar count has declined from over 200 in the 1980s to approximately 20 by the mid-2020s. The Wrangler's closure left a gap that Denver Sweet briefly filled before it, too, closed in late 2025.
The original 1700 Logan Street location became Be on Key Psychedelic Ripple, a music venue. That building caught fire in May 2020 and was demolished in August 2022. The site is now slated for apartment construction. The 3090 Downing Street building sold for $2.95 million and was acquired for affordable housing development.
Denver Sweet opened around 2019 at 776 Lincoln Street to fill the void left by the Wrangler, offering a bear bar with a rooftop patio. It won Best Queer Bar recognition but closed in late 2025, continuing the pattern of bear and leather spaces struggling to sustain themselves in Denver's market.
The Wrangler is one chapter in Denver's long LGBTQ+ history. Read the full guide to queer Denver, past and present.
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