Festival dates - Thursday 13th to Monday 17th August 2026

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Thank you to everyone for creating a wonderful space for all! 

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I have never felt such a strong sense of belonging as I did here

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I had an amazing time at queer spirit. Would definitely return! 

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Queer spirit is creating a really strong culture. Its unique. I'm proud to watch it and be a part of it

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It was a privilege to serve our Queer community 

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I felt so so so welcomed in all of who I am and met so many wonderful people

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Such a wonderful experience, I'm so happy I came!

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Beautiful. What my body needed

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A nourishing event full of love, growth and healing. I felt like I’d come home

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All good, absolutely fantastic festival and hope to go next year! cannot wait...

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Spiritual, sexual and magical - not to be missed beautiful-people

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Great workshops, some of the best I’ve taken part in! 

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There is not a moment I would not relive..it was such a wonderful time... thank you all

Queer Spirit Full Moon Circle

Queer Spirit Full Moon Circle 28 February

Radical Faeries and Queer Spirits gather in south London just before the Virgo full moon, the last full moon of winter!

This month we celebrate London's gay history - and specifically the spirit of the Mollies: 300 years ago London's queer subculture was already developing (and maybe had been for much longer). In February 1726 London's molly houses were raided, mollies arrested, tried and 3 men were sent to the gallows.

Molly house, by HogarthMother Clap's molly house in Holborn was one of several establishments raided after an undercover surveillance operation by members of the Society for the Reformation of Manners, which had been exposing the existence of mollies since the start of the century - describing a scene that was already well formed: groups of men met regularly at molly ‘clubs’ where they used ‘maiden’ nicknames for one another, danced together, camped it up, sometimes dressed in drag on special ‘festival nights’, and had a specialised molly slang.

"Most of the sodomites convicted from 1698 through 1709 were entrapped due to the zeal of one man, Rev William Bray, the leading organiser of the Society for the Reformation of Manners. Most of the raids on molly houses through the 1720s were lead by six members of the Society who infiltrated the molly houses. The founding leaders of the Societies, such as Rev Bray, were dead by 1730, and due to a financial scandal the Societies formally disbanded in 1738. Relatively little is known about the queer subculture after that date: not because queers went underground, but because specific groups of moral reformers no longer worked actively to reveal them." Rictor Norton, A Critique of Social Constructionism and Postmodern Queer Theory, "Queer Subcultures," 24 October 2002, updated 19 June 2008 <http://www.rictornorton.co.uk/social27.htm>

You are invited to dress to express your Faerie or indeed your MOLLY spirit!

We gather from 7 to set up the space and cast circle around 8 pm, then drum, dance and socialise through the evening.
There are lots of drums and percussion to use. you can also bring your own.

Also welcome to bring snacks to share and your own liquid refreshments.

Donation requested to cover venue hire. £5/£10 as you can afford, cash on door or PayPal

NOTAFLOF - No One Turned Away For Lack Of Funds.

 

YOU CAN SIGN UP FOR EMAIL ANNOUNCEMENTS OF THESE CIRCLES AND OTHER RELATED EVENTS AT QueerSpirit.net

Event Properties

Event start Sat 28 Feb 26
Event end Sat 28 Feb 26
Price (inc VAT) Suggested donation £5/£10
Location Wheatsheaf Hall

Location Map