Gay pride parade in boston

  • Pride Month Jun 13

    Support remains robust in Boston this Pride Month amid fear and uncertainty

    Pride Month events in Boston continue to show support to the LGBTQ+ group, but there has been a backslide in corporate sponsors for other events across the nation due, in part, to political press

  • Boston Self-acceptance Jun 2

    ‘You will not stand alone&#;: Boston Pride kickoff, flag raising held Monday

    Boston kicked off Self-acceptance Month on Monday with a flag raising ceremony. The event got underway around noon and lasted until almost 1 p.m. It was immediately followed by performances by transgender artis

  • Boston Pride May 16

    Boston&#;s Pride organizers report theme for pride and festival

    Boston Event For The People has announced the theme of the Pride Parade and Festival, which will take place on Saturday, June 14, BP4TP organizers mean for the “Here to Stay” theme to sen

  • The Boston Equality Trail

    Introduction

    The first official Gay Pride Protest in Boston was held on Saturday, June 26, This was a distinctly political event that was preceded by a full week of workshops on various issues affecting the emerging gay community, such as coming out and queer spirituality. The march path encompassed four major stops: the Bay Village bar Jacques, Boston police headquarters on Berkeley Street, the Mention House on Beacon Hill, and St. Paul's Cathedral on Tremont Street. At each stop, a speaker presented a list of demands. When the marchers arrived at the Articulate House, a call was issued to include homosexuals in civil rights legislation and eliminate anti-sodomy statutes dating from Puritan times. Speaker Laura McMurry told the throng, As homosexual people, we have been given a second-class citizenship. We demand an termination to this now! We will not be place down any longer." 

    This walking tour follows the map of Boston's first Lgbtq+ Pride March in and offers information about unlike services, community organizations, issues, and individual

    Boston Pride For The People Pride Month Celebration

    Boston Celebration For The People (BP4TP) is sending a clarify message with its annual Pride Month celebration theme “Here to Stay” - people who identify as LGBTQIA+ cannot be erased, pushed into the shadows, or silenced, in the face of increased political attacks. Held on June 14, the day begins at 11am with the BP4TP Parade from Copley Square to Boston Frequent, where all are invited to take part in a festival from noon-6pm with performers and exist music. Finish up the day at City Hall Plaza for a Block Party from pm with an entertainment stage with DJs, drag queens, kings, other royalty, pole dancers, and more; beer, wine, and seltzers from local New England breweries such as Dorchester Brewery, Same-sex attracted Beer, Provincetown Brewery, and DrawDown Brewery; a assigned area for sober-inclusive; and more. BP4TP is a volunteer-led organization that plans activities and events that celebrate the rich diversity, culture, and intersectionality of the LGBTQ+ entire event commemorates the brave Queer people who risked their safety to a

    Pride, 'No Kings' combine in Boston march and festival

    Pride was born as a protest, and organizers aimed to re-enforce those roots Saturday in Boston, as “No Kings” demonstrations took place across the country.

    The parade began at 11 a.m. in Copley Square, converging the two causes as marchers crossed downtown. Twirling rainbow umbrellas and waving Pride flags under drizzling skies, paraders whooped and cheered as they place off through Boston's Back Bay.

    Celebration organizer Boston Pride for the People says this year's theme, “Here to Stay," is meant “to send a clear word that people who identify as LGBTQIA+ can not be erased, pushed into the shadows, or silenced, in the face of increased political attacks.”

    Brian Gonzalez, 37, of Boston, came carrying a Mexican Pride flag. Like for many attendees, showing up was part celebration, part protest.

    "I'm a gay Latino immigrant and a U.S. citizen, and I am proud of the way that my life has gone and the intersectionality of all of my identities," Gonzalez said. "And being me means sticking it to the man, and that's why