Des of pa and perseverance San Francis's gay muny fally led to vditn the Bay Area and across the natn. This is a timele of historil events.
Contents:
- PARADE 1972 FIRST GAY PRI PARA SAN FRANCIS
- HOW ACTIVISTS ORGANIZED THE FIRST GAY PRI PARAS
- EVERY SF PRI THEME SCE THE FIRST-EVER GAY FREEDOM DAY 1970
PARADE 1972 FIRST GAY PRI PARA SAN FRANCIS
The California Supreme Court l that gays have the right to assemble, leadg to a proliferatn of gay bars and eventually the formatn of social and polil groups San Francis’s gay muny.
” Public sentiment begs to shift toward qutng harassment of the gay muny.
This photo is of the sprawlg La Galleria ndomiums on the rner of Bh and Taylor streets on Thursday June 20, 2013, the se of the raid at the gay nightclub.
HOW ACTIVISTS ORGANIZED THE FIRST GAY PRI PARAS
Entertaer and drag queen Jose Sarria ns for San Francis supervisor, the first openly gay ndidate to n for public office the Uned Stat. Life Magaze lls San Francis the “Gay Capal of Ameri. A group march down Polk Street to Cy Hall San Francis's first gay rights march.
A “gay-”' tak place the followg day Goln Gate Park. Harvey Milk is sworn to the San Francis Board of Supervisors beg the first openly gay cy official California history. San Francis hosts the Gay Gam, an ternatnal sports and culture event.
EVERY SF PRI THEME SCE THE FIRST-EVER GAY FREEDOM DAY 1970
In a historic victory for gay rights, the U. Supreme Court l 5-4 that gays and lbians have the nstutnal right to marry their chosen partner. On June 25, 1978, activists hoist a vibrant rabow flag the midst of the ftivi for San Francis’s Gay and Lbian Freedom Day para.
Gilbert, a drag queen and clothg signer, met gay rights activist Harvey Milk, dubbed the “Mayor of Castro St. ” for his succsful anizg of San Francis’s gay muny, 1974.
“Our job as gay people was to e out, to be visible, to live the tth, ” Baker later said. Known then as the Christopher Street Liberatn Day March — named after the street on which Stonewall is loted — the para began on Washgton Place between Sheridan Square and Sixth Avenue and moved up Sixth Avenue, endg wh a “Gay-In” Central ia that LGBTQ+ people would march through the streets of New York Cy, proudly clarg their existence, their pri and their love was tly revolutnary back then. It was ually “a small, pole group of gays and lbians [would picket] outsi Liberty Hall, " Sargeant scrib.