By: Brynn Holland

How Activists Organized the First Gay Pride Parades

When the police raided the Stonewall Inn in 1969, the riots that ensued sparked a global movement.

Participants at a Gay Pride gathering in San Francisco, California, early 1970s.

Harold Adler/Underwood Archives/Getty Images

Published: June 09, 2017

Last Updated: March 05, 2025

Everything changed at 1:20 a.m. on June 28, 1969, when the New York city police barged into the Stonewall Inn. The Stonewall was operating without a liquor license at 51-53 Christopher Street in Manhattan. The N.Y. State Liquor Authority did not give out licenses to establishments that served gay patrons. Despite being paid off to ignore this indiscretion, the police officers entered with a warrant and started to arrest revelers inside the bar, but their squad cars did not arrive. The Stonewall Inn’s patrons were forced to wait outside the bar handcuffed, which drew a crowd.

One woman in handcuffs was hit over the head by an officer. She pleaded with the crowd to “do something.” They responded by throwing pennies and other objects at the police. As the crowd reached hundreds, a full-blown riot ensued. Ten police officers barricaded themselves inside the Stonewall. The crowd set fire to the barricade.

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The fire department and Tactical Police Force were called in. They put out the flames, rescued the officers inside Stonewall and dispersed the crowd—but that didn’t last long. Over the next six days, demonstrations continued outside the bar, as thousands of people showed up to express their solidarity with the LGBT community.

The Stonewall Inn was a vital LGBT institution. For relatively little money, drag queens (who received a bitter reception at other bars), runaways, homeless LGBT youths and others could spend the night and even dance. The violent attack on this sacred bar that many called home was the breaking point for those looking to advance LGBT political activism.

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The Stonewall Riots, as they became known, made one thing clear—the LGBT movement needed to be louder and more visible. Nothing was going to change if they continued their passive, non-threatening tactics. They needed to get organized. Five months after the riots, activists Craig Rodwell, his partner Fred Sargeant, Ellen Brody and Linda Rhodes proposed a resolution at the Eastern Regional Conference of Homophile Organizations (ERCHO) in Philadelphia that a march be held in New York City to commemorate the one-year anniversary of the raid. Their proposal was for an annual march on the last Saturday in June with “no dress or age regulations.” This was a drastic change from the current methods used by LGBT activists who would host walks and vigils in silence with a required dress code: men in jackets and ties and women in dresses.

While the proposal for a march was approved, it was the Christopher Street Liberation Day Umbrella Committee that got it planned. Meeting in Craig Rodwell’s apartment and bookstore (the Oscar Wilde Bookshop on Christopher Street), the details for the first NYC Pride Parade, then known as the Christopher Street Liberation Day March, were hashed out. Making use of the Oscar Wilde mailing list, they were able to get the word out. The festivities turned into a week-long celebration, something many cities continue to do to this day.

L. Craig Schoonmaker was part of the Christopher Street Liberation Day March planning committee. When they were looking for a slogan for the event, it was Schoonmaker that suggested “Pride.” The idea of “Gay Power” was thrown around, but Schoonmaker said gay individuals lacked real power to make change, but one thing they did have was pride. In a 2015 interview with “The Allusionist,” Schoonmaker explained, “A lot of people were very repressed, they were conflicted internally, and didn’t know how to come out and be proud. That’s how the movement was most useful, because they thought, ‘Maybe I should be proud.’” The official chant for the march became, “Say it loud, gay is proud.”

All their efforts came to fruition on June 28, 1970, the one-year anniversary of the Stonewall Riots. The march was 51 blocks long from west of Sixth Avenue at Waverly Place, in Greenwich Village, all the way to Sheep’s Meadow in Central Park, where activists held a “Gay-in.” Borrowing a technique that had been popularized by the Civil Rights Movement, the “Gay-in” was both a protest and a celebration. The front page of The New York Times ran with the headline, “Thousands of Homosexuals Hold A Protest Rally in Central Park.”

There were no floats, no music blasting through the streets, no scantily clad dancers: this was a political statement and a test—what would happen when LGBT citizens became more visible? While crowd estimates vary widely from 1,000 to 20,000, one thing remained clear—there had never been a demonstration like this before.

Stonewall Inn

The Stonewall Inn is a bar located in New York City’s Greenwich Village that served as a haven in the 1960s for the city’s gay, lesbian and transgender community. At the time, homosexual acts remained illegal in every state except Illinois, and bars and restaurants could get shut down for having gay employees or serving gay patrons.

Redux

Most gay bars and clubs in New York at the time were operated by the Mafia, who paid corruptible police officers to look the other way and blackmailed wealthy gay patrons by threatening to “out” them. Here, protesters demonstrate outside the New York gay bar, Christopher’s End.

Diana Davies/The New York Public Library

Stonewall Riots

During the early hours of June 28, 1969, the Stonewall Inn was raided by police with no warning. Armed with a warrant, police officers roughed up patrons and arrested people for bootlegged alcohol and other violations, including criminal mischief and disorderly conduct. More police arrived and the crowd erupted after police roughed up a woman dressed in masculine attire who had complained that her handcuffs were too tight.

NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images

The Stonewall Riots

People started taunting the officers, yelling “Pigs!” and “Copper!” and throwing pennies at them, followed by bottles. Some in the crowd slashed the tires of the police vehicles. As the mob grew, NYPD officers retreated into Stonewall, barricading themselves inside. Some rioters used a parking meter as a battering ram to break through the door; others threw beer bottles, trash and other objects, or made impromptu firebombs with bottles, matches and lighter fluid.

Fred W. McDarrah/Getty Images

Two transgender women of color, Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera (far left) were said to have resisted arrest and were among those who threw bottles (or bricks or stones) at the police. They are pictured at a 1973 rally for gay rights in New York City.

Diana Davies/The New York Public Library

Marsha P. Johnson was a Black and transgender woman and revolutionary LGBTQ rights activist. She later established the Street Transvestite (now Transgender) Action Revolutionaries (STAR), a group committed to helping homeless transgender youth in New York City.

Diana Davies/The New York Public Library

Sylvia Rivera was a Latina-American drag queen who became one of the most radical gay and transgender activists of the 1960s and ’70s. As co-founder of the Gay Liberation Front, Rivera was known for participating in the Stonewall Riots and establishing the political organization STAR (Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries).

Kay Tobin/The New York Public Library

The Stonewall Inn

After the Stonewall Riots, a message was painted on the outside of the boarded-up bar reading, “We homosexuals plead with out people to please help maintain peaceful and quiet conduct on the streets of the village.” This sign was written by the Mattachine Society–an early organization dedicated to fighting for gay rights.

Fred W. McDarrah/Getty Images

Stonewall Inn

An unidentified group of young people celebrate outside the boarded-up Stonewall Inn after the riots. The bar opened the night after the riots, although it did not serve alcohol. More and more supporters gathered outside the bar, chanting slogans like “gay power” and “we shall overcome.”

Fred W. McDarrah/Getty Images

Over the next several nights, gay activists continued to gather near the Stonewall, taking advantage of the moment to spread information and build the community that would fuel the growth of the gay rights movement. The Gay Liberation Front was formed in the years after the riots. They are pictured here marching in Times Square, 1969.

Diana Davies/The New York Public Library

Here, Sylvia Ray Rivera (front) and Arthur Bell are seen at a gay liberation demonstration, New York University, 1970

Diana Davies/The New York Public Library

Marsha P. Johnson is seen at a Gay Liberation Front demonstration at City Hall in New York City.

Diana Davies/The New York Public Library

Here, a large crowd commemorates the 2nd anniversary of the Stonewall riots in Greenwich Village of New York City in 1971. Fifty years after the riots, the NYPD made a formal apology on June 6, 2019, stating the police at that time enforced discriminatory laws. “The actions taken by the N.Y.P.D. were wrong — plain and simple,” said NYPD police commissioner James P. O’Neill.

Grey Villet/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

Chicago actually took to the streets in 1970 the day before New York. The city marked the one-year anniversary of the Stonewall Riots with a week-long celebration that included a Gay Dance, workshops and speeches. The week-long festivities ended with approximately 150 people marching from Washington Square Park to the Water Tower at the intersection of Michigan and Chicago avenues, with some continuing on to the Civic Center. Organized by the Gay Liberation Movement, the official slogan was “Gay Power.” The next day, the Chicago Tribune ran a 75-word story on the third page with the headline, “Gay Liberation Stage March to Civic Center.”

On the same day as New York, the LGBT community of Greater Los Angeles took to Hollywood Boulevard to display their pride. The march almost did not happen. After applying for a permit, the organizers, the Christopher Street West Association, were granted the right to march as long as they paid fees exceeding $1.5 million. It took the ACLU’s interference to ensure that Pride in LA would continue without excessive, discriminatory costs. Today, Los Angeles boasts they had “the world’s first permitted parade advocating for gay rights.”

Pride Parade

View of the large crowd, some of whom are holding up handmade signs and banners, participating in a gay and lesbian pride parade in the Back Bay neighborhood of Boston.

Spencer Grant/Getty Images

Pride Parade

View of the large crowd, some of whom are holding up handmade signs and banners, participating in a gay and lesbian pride parade in the Back Bay neighborhood of Boston.

Spencer Grant/Getty Images

In San Francisco, activists marched down Polk Street and held a “Gay-in” at Golden Gate Park on June 28th, too. Two years later, SF held its first Pride parade. Known as the Christopher Street West Parade, it was deemed too small for Market Street (where SF Pride now marches annually), as they estimated there would only be 15,000 spectators. With the San Francisco Chronicle publishing articles in support of the burgeoning LGBT rights movement, the first-ever SF Pride March was deemed a huge success. (The year before the Chronicle had even published an editorial piece supporting same-sex marriage).

To this day, SF, NYC and Chicago continue to honor the anniversary of the Stonewall Riots, always having their parade on the last weekend in June (LA participates earlier in the month). Additionally, hundreds of cities worldwide have created their own Pride Parades.

On June 11, 1999, President Bill Clinton issued the first-ever proclamation declaring June to be Gay and Lesbian Pride Month. His successor, George W. Bush, did not continue the tradition. The practice was picked up again by Barack Obama, who declared June LGBT Pride Month all eight years of his administration. On June 24, 2016, President Barack Obama also established a 7.7-acre area around the re-opened Stonewall Inn as the Stonewall National Movement, turning the site that sparked a worldwide movement into the first LGBT national park site in the United States.

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Citation Information

Article title
How Activists Organized the First Gay Pride Parades
Website Name
History
Date Accessed
March 22, 2025
Publisher
A&E Television Networks
Last Updated
March 05, 2025
Original Published Date
June 09, 2017

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