Very few recent mass shootings have occurred at small businesses, but Pulse nightclub was just that. This wasn’t a government building, it was a husband and wife who owned a small nightclub that was created to honor a family member. The nightclub provided a safe place, and was part of the heartbeat of the LGBT community in Florida.
The one-year anniversary was marked with three memorials. One began at 1:45 a.m. Two mayors, Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer and Orange County Mayor Teresa Jacobs, were in attendance, as well as over 1,000 spectators. At 2:02 a.m., the exact time the lone gunman entered Latin night at Pulse in Orlando and started to fire his bullets the year before, the names of the 49 victims were read out loud. Earlier that morning, Poma turned the outside lights on for the first time since the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history took place the previous year. “We only had room for around 200 people in the building, there was a huge overflow. It was emotional and very beautiful. They invited family members up one at a time to say their loved ones’ names,” Brady said. The memorial was guarded by 49 people dressed as angels, in all white, who silently surrounded the perimeter of the club. There was another memorial later that day at noon, with the final one at 10 p.m.
Other venues in Orlando memorialized the victims of the Pulse shooting, too. The Center, an LGBTQ sanctuary in Orlando, revealed an art installation by local artist Lindsay Lynch that displayed the faces of each of the 49 victims. After the shooting, The Center became a central gathering place for the community looking to express grief.