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Pride history

HISTORY OF PRIDE MONTH MEANS MUCH MORE FOR CELEBRATIONS TODAY

The sun isn’t the only thing that comes out in June. Rainbow flags also start appearing in corporate office windows, coffee shops, and your neighbor’s front yard. June has been an unofficial month of celebratory queerness for decades. Though the origins of Pride Month span back to the ’50s, President Bill Clinton officially made it “Gay and Lesbian Pride Month” in 2000. President Barack Obama made it more inclusive in 2011, calling it Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Pride Month. No matter what you call it, Pride Month has a rich history that informs how it’s observed today.

Pride Honors The Gay Rights Protests Of The ’60s

When asked about when the gay rights movement in this country began, people tend to point to June 28, 1969: the night of the Stonewall Riots. But Caitlin McCarthy, the archivist for The Center, an LGBTQ community center in New York City, explains that the Stonewall riot was one of many. “QTPOC-led uprisings like those at Stonewall and The Haven in New York, Cooper Donuts and the Black Cat Tavern in LA, and Compton’s Cafeteria in San Francisco were all responses to police harassment and brutality,” McCarthy says.

The first Pride March — a rally in NYC on the last Saturday in June — was dubbed Christopher Street Liberation Day in honor of the Stonewall riot. (Christopher Street is the physical home of the Stonewall Inn.) “The Christopher Street Liberation Day Committee was formed to commemorate the one-year anniversary of the Stonewall uprising of June 1969 with a march from the West Village followed by a ‘gay be-in’ gathering in Central Park,” McCarthy says. This helped cement Ston

Pride 1981

The first Pride March — a rally in NYC on the last Saturday in June — was dubbed Christopher Street Liberation Day in honor of the Stonewall riot. (Christopher Street is the physical home of the Stonewall Inn.) “The Christopher Street Liberation Day Committee was formed to commemorate the one-year anniversary of the Stonewall uprising of June 1969 with a march from the West Village followed by a ‘gay be-in’ gathering in Central Park,” McCarthy says. This helped cement Stonewall as the most culturally recognized foundation of Pride.

Trans & Gender Non-conforming Folks Of Color Started Pride

Many people are familiar with the transformative activism of Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera, McCarthy says. Johnson and Rivera co-founded STAR, the Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries, which organized direct actions like sit-ins as well as provided shelter for trans sex workers and other LGBTQ homeless youth. Both activists were also members of the anti-capitalist, internationalist group the Gay Liberation Front (GLF), which organized marches, held dances to raise funds for queer people in need, and published a gay newspaper called Come Out!.

McCarthy tell Bustle that Johnson and Rivera’s lesser-known (but not less important) siblings include Zazu Nova, a member of the GLF and STAR; Stormé Delarverie, a drag king and emcee for trans and drag-centered touring company Jewel Box Revue; and Lani Ka’ahumanu, who founded the Bay Area Bisexual Network.

Pride history

“Gay Pride” Replaced “Gay Power” In The 1970s

According to a 2006 article published in the journal American Sociological Review, “gay power” was a common slogan used in queer publications and at protests in the ’60s and early ’70s. Many local groups from Black Power movement and radical queer organizing were able to unite against police brutality in the ’70s. This collaboration makes the use of “gay power” at this time perhaps unsurprising.

“Radical organizing, influenced by and in concert with the antiracist and antiwar movement, followed [Stonewall],” McCarthy says. “The protests, sit-ins and direct actions conducted and participated in by early gay liberation groups such as Gay Liberation Front, Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries, Dyketactics and Combahee River Collective demanded radical structural change in the face of continued oppression.”

The National Historic Landmark Nomination for the Stonewall Inn, drawn up in 1999 for the United States Department of the Interior, also noted that “gay power” was used rather than “gay pride” in most settings. Though the activist Craig Schoonmaker is often credited with popularizing the phrase “gay pride” (as opposed to power) in 1970, it’s worth noting that his organizing vision was exclusionary to lesbians. Today, “pride” is used as a shorthand to refer to LGBTQ celebrations and protests alike.

My Pride is not for sale

What Pride Month Looks Like Today

Despite these radical roots, corporate-sponsored Pride sunglasses and temporarily rainbow-splashed company logos are hallmarks of modern Pride Months. Many people consider having big corporations sponsor commercialized Pride marches disrespectful to the history of Pride. To wit: The Stonewall riot that most people cite as the origin of Pride was a direct response to police raids and brutality, but Pride marches today tend to be accompanied by police escorts. In light of 2020’s Black Lives Matter protests, however, Pride organizations are reconsidering their positions on police at Pride, with some deciding to ban police officers from marching at Pride until certain racial justice reform requirements are met.

Many LGBTQ+ people note that one month of visibility out of 12 is not enough to ensure queer folks’ safety and equity, while others argue that even a month of rainbow flags flying in your local Target is better than silence. (The radical founders of the Pride movement likely wouldn’t have approved of silence, either.) Regardless of how you celebrate Pride, knowing its history can give you a fuller experience of the month — and a deeper appreciation for how it was made possible.

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