Fact check: What the candidates for governor got right or wrong during this week's debates
LIFE

Bakery that refused to do cake for gay couple closes its doors

Will Higgins
will.higgins@indystar.com

An Indianapolis bakery that drew protests for refusing to bake a cake for a gay couple has closed its doors.

The 111 Cakery was still profitable, said co-owner Randy McGath, but McGath's 45-year-old wife, Trish, who did most of the baking, wanted more time to spend with the couple's four grandchildren. The business "was wearing her out," her husband said. She has been taking a break from working since Dec. 31, when the bakery went out of business, he said.

Last March the McGaths faced a firestorm of protest after declining a request to bake a cake for a wedding-type ceremony for two men. Fox 59 broadcast the story of the rejection, and the next day Facebook and Twitter hummed with outrage. The Indianapolis Star reported on the ensuing dust-up.

The flap led to just a single picketer urging a bakery boycott, but many nearby residents were on his side. The bakery was at the intersection of 16th and Talbott streets, a hub of gay culture for decades. At least three long-established gay bars are just blocks away.

Other people, however, seemed to applaud the bakery's stand, traveling long distances for pastries. "We had people from all over, from Brownsburg and Lafayette," McGath, 48, said.

An ensuing sales spike lasted three or four months. After that the long-distance business seemed to cool, but McGath insisted sales never dipped below their pre-flap levels.

McGath said he and his wife, who attend a Baptist church on Indianapolis' Westside, were well aware of the neighborhood's gay culture when they opened their bakery there in 2012. He said they served the gay community gladly for several years but "just didn't want to be party to a committment ceremony" because such an event reflected "a committment to sin."

Despite McGath's views his discourse remained civil even in talks with his most virulent critic, the lone picketer Todd Fuqua, both he and Fuqua said.

"There was zero hate here," said McGath, who is now selling recreational vehicles. "We were just trying to be right with our God. I was able to speak to many homosexuals in the community and to speak our opinion and have a civil conversation. I'm still in touch with some."

Contact Star reporter Will Higgins at (317) 444-6043. Follow him on Twitter @WillRHiggins.