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Monthly Spotlight: Pride!

Pride History: USA The Beginning of Pride Government & Pride Worldwide Pride Pride Through Time
What is LGBTQ+? Mother of Pride Recognizing Pride How to Celebrate 100s to Today
Pride Timeline First Pride Organizations Largest Pride
Stonewall Riot Liberation or Equality? Iowa & LGBTQ+ Representation
Flags Illegal Pride

Lesbian

G = Gay

B Bisexual

T Transgender

Q = Queer

I = Intersex

A = Asexual

+ = People who have Identifiers not included in the standard acronym

2S = Two-Spirit

P = Pansexual

second A = Ally

Evolution of the acronym

Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity in the acronym

How do you define 'Sexual Orientation'?

 

What is the Stonewall Inn?

"The Stonewall" was a gay bar located close to where Christopher Street meets Seventh Avenue in Greenwich Village. --What Went Down

How'd it start?

While following routine procedures of bringing presumed cross-dressers to the police station for examination to verify their gender and identification, things went awry. When some of the presumed cross-dressers tangled with the officers who were escorting them to the curb, members of this impromptu audience broke another precedent by shouting encouragement. When someone managed to jump out of a van and run off, they cheered. Passersby attracted by the commotion joined in. --What Went Down

How did that turn into a riot?

Led by a few precocious activists, several of these observers began to taunt the police. Soon, they were pelting them with coins, rocks, bottles, and bricks. When the stunned detectives retreated into the bar, the result outside was surprise and delight, followed by a surging sense of power at having challenged and intimidated long-feared authority figures. Emboldened protestors now swarmed across the street, crowded onto the sidewalk in front of the Stonewall, and bashed in its windows and doors.--What Went Down

How long did the riot last?

Police reports recorded this episode as a "riot" that lasted for forty minutes. Officially, it ended when a summoned squad of riot-control police succeeded in clearing the stretch of Christopher Street in front of the bar. Despite erected barricades and posted patrolmen, however, agitated and awestruck spectators milled around in Sheridan Square, the bulk of which lies on the far side of Christopher Park, until daybreak.--What Went Down

What made the Stonewall Riots different?

While it was one of the first rights to break out for the LGBT community, it continued for another couple of nights. While the Stonewall did close down after the initial riot, it reopened the next day as a juice bar, where many people of the LGBT community would come after hearing what had happened the night before. The festivities and celebrations of this started getting out of hand, thus causing another riot with more purpose to break out as police tried to quiet them down. After this, the police camped out for the next couple of days to prevent more disruption. However, by the third day, more riots ensued, and with a much larger blaze as fire was also brought into the mix. 

This whole wave of disruption, from the three nights of street demonstrations to the countless acts of resistance and defiance by these characters and cliques, would soon be dubbed the Stonewall Riots. It started as a disorganized rebellion against oppression, but it triggered a chain reaction of community-building and political organizing that was emulated across the country and publicized throughout the world. Overnight this unprecedented surge of organizing transformed what had been a largely underground vanguard movement into a highly public mass movement for gay pride, power, and community. --What Made Stonewall Different?

Why did the Stonewall Riots happen, and when and where did they happen?

When historians have tried to address this question, they have come up with a number of plausible answers. Few give much credence to the popular myth that the riots in 1969, when thousands of people protested in the streets of Greenwich Village in response to a police raid on the Stonewall Inn, were a completely spontaneous and entirely unprecedented reaction to the oppression faced by LGBT people at that time. -- A Theory of Revolution for the Riots

WorldPride!

WorldPride, licensed by InterPride and organized by one of its members, is an event that promotes visibility and awareness of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex, and queer (LGBTIQ+) issues on an international level. WorldPride includes parades/marches, festivals, and other activities such as a human rights conference.

At the 1997 world conference and general meeting, InterPride members voted to award the inaugural WorldPride to be held in Rome in 2000. The host cities continue to be selected by the members of InterPride with WorldPrides, usually held every two years.

2025 marks the 50th Anniversary of Pride celebrations in Washington, DC! The Capital Pride Alliance is excited for Washington, DC to host WorldPride 2025 and share this momentous and exciting milestone with our international community. Come and celebrate May 23 – June 8, 2025!

To learn More, CLICK HERE!


NYC Pride March

The inaugural March took place in 1970, one year after the Stonewall Uprising, and has since evolved into an annual civil rights demonstration. Its purpose has expanded over time to encompass raising awareness about the fight against AIDS and honoring those we have lost to illness, violence, and neglect.

In advance of registration, be sure you are familiar with the 2025 March Rules and 2025 March FAQs. While we encourage you to register early, the March order is not determined by when you register.

To register and/or learn more, CLICK HERE!


Don't forget! There are pride events closer than you think!

Dubuque Pride                   Mason City Pride

Decorah Pride                    Des Moines Pride

Iowa City Pride                   Cedar Valley Pride

Cedar Rapids Pride            Quad Cities Pride

La Crosse Pride                  Waverly Pride

 

  • Human Rights Campaign 
    • The Human Rights Campaign envisions a world where every member of the LGBTQ+ family has the freedom to live their truth without fear, and with equality under the law.

Human Rights Campaign Logo: Blue background with a yellow equals sign

  • The Fenway Health
    • Since 1971, Fenway Health has been working to make life healthier for the people in our neighborhood, the LGBTQIA+ community, people living with HIV/AIDS, and the broader population. Fenway was founded in 1971 as part of the free clinic movement by students who believed that “health care should be a right, not a privilege.”

Fenway Health Logo: Light blue background with Fenway Institute written in white and a equals sign both horizantal and vertical in the middle in white.

GMLA Logo: White background with G L on tom of M A all in blue

NALGAP Logo: bars the color of the rainbow making a triangle on a white background being held together with a rainbow gradient circle with NALGAP over top of it in black text

  • GLAAD
    • As a dynamic media force, GLAAD ensures fair, accurate, and inclusive representation that rewrites the script for LGBTQ acceptance. GLAAD tackles tough issues to shape the narrative and provoke dialogue that leads to cultural change. GLAAD protects all that has been accomplished and envisions a world with 100% LGBTQ acceptance.

Glaad Logo: Cyan blue GLAAD on a whit background with a blue ribbon that start the same color but gets darker as it goes up and down.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

Since the beginning of 2025, many bills have been introduced to the Iowa Senate and House. The list below shows the bills that have been introduced in Iowa legislation that may/can/will harm the LGBTQ+ community in Iowa as of 5/15/2025, when it was last updated:

  • HF80 & SF8
    • Allows teachers and staff to misgender students, even if parents tell them not to
    • Status: Ineligible for debate
    • Passed: No
  • HF51 & SF116
    • "Obscenity" ban meant to include drag as "obscene"
    • Status: Ineligible for debate
    • Passed: No
  • HF888 & SF204
    • Among other things, removes gender neutral language from world language courses and lifts the cap on the number of unrelated children that can be homeschooled by a single person. Removes science and social studies requirements for homeschooling in grades K-6.
    • Status: Ineligible for debate
    • Passed: No
  • HF269 & SF282
    • Prevents any course Rep Collins disagrees with from being part of a requirement for any degree program
    • Status: Ineligible for debate
    • Passed: No
  • HF295
    • Allows the attorney general to sue accrediting bodies if they remove accreditation from Iowa higher ed institutions that are out of compliance due to state laws
    • Status: Passed by both Chambers, Signed by Governor
    • Passed: Yes
  • HF854
    • Removes eligibility for the Iowa Tuition Grant from any institution with a diversity office
    • Status: Ineligible for debate
    • Passed: No
  • HF855
    • Prohibits community colleges from having diversity programming
    • Status: Ineligible for debate
    • Passed: No 
  • HF401 & SF244
    • Among other things, it restricts Regents universities from offering general education programs that include discussions of systemic sexism or racism
    • Status: House- Cleared, Senate- Cleared
    • Passed: No 
  • SF115
    • Changes sex ed from opt out to opt in, prevents attendance at Safe Schools Governor’s Conference without explicit parental permission
    • Status: Not eligible for debate
    • Passed: No 
  • HSB84
    • Don’t say gay/trans expansion to grades K-12
    • Status: Not eligible for debate
    • Passed: No 
  • SF156
    • Bathroom bill, all ages
    • Status: Not eligible for debate
    • Passed: No
  • HF571 & SF220
    • Allows healthcare providers, facilities, and insurance companies to deny both care and payment for procedures that they disagree with
    • Status: House- Cleared, Senate- Cleared
    • Passed: No
  • HF521 & SF235
    • Allows for obscenity charges for materials students view in libraries or at art exhibitions in legitimate educational settings. Chills speech.
    • Status: Ineligible for debate
    • Passed No
  • HF880 & SF238
    • Strips funding from libraries if they engage with free speech advocacy organizations like the American Library Association or pay dues to such an organization. Just another way to weaken libraries and target them for having inclusive materials.
    • Status: Ineligible
    • Passed: No
  • SF473
    • Allows for discrimination in foster care placement if biological parents have certain “sincerely held religious beliefs”. Allows foster parents to put children through conversion therapy if this comports with their beliefs. 
    • Status: House- Cleared, Senate- Cleared
    • Passed: No
  • HF891
    • Original draft: Drag ban. Makes it illegal to perform or read in front of minors while “exhibiting a gender identity that is different from the sex assigned at birth”. Felony charge and $10,000 fine.
      • Amended bill: allows parents to sue venues for anything they deem “obscene”
    • Status: Ineligible for debate
    • Passed: No
  • HF558 & SF347
    • Book ban in public libraries prevents anyone under 18 from accessing books that have any mention of sex, including classics like The Color PurpleThe Handmaid’s Tale, and 1984.
    • Status: Not eligible for debate
    • Passed: No
  • HF583 & SF418
    • ​​​​​​​Removes gender identity from the Iowa Civil Rights Act, removes the ability to change gender marker on birth certificates, inserts restrictive definitions for “man” and “woman” into the code, and enshrines “separate but equal” in Iowa law.
    • Status: Passed by both Chambers
    • Passed: Yes
  • HSB286 & SSB1195
    • ​​​​​​​Criminalizes homelessness with fines and jail time, creates heavily policed open-air camps where basic medications will be illegal, and punishes service providers for things that take place off their property
    • Status: Ineligible for debate
    • Passed: No
  • SF335
    • Creates harsh penalties for any teacher accused of doing anything DEI-related, and allows parents to sue them in an individual capacity
    • Status: Ineligible for debate
    • Passed: No
  • HF856
    • Prohibits state entities from enacting or promoting training, programming, or activities relating to race, color, ethnicity, gender identity, or sexual orientation. Effectively bans Black History Month and all similar recognitions.
    • Status: Passed both Chambers, Governor's signature- pending
    • Passed: Yes
  • HF865
    • Removes language from bullying code related to the characteristics of students
    • Status: Passed by both Chambers, Governor's signature- pending
    • Passed: Yes
  • HSB84
    • Prevents surveying students with any questions related to sexual orientation or gender identity in grades 7-12 (already prohibited in grades K-6).
    • Status: Not eligible for debate
    • Passed: No
  • SF507
    • ​​​​​​​Prohibits cities and counties from enacting or promoting training, programming, or activities relating to race, color, ethnicity, gender identity, or sexual orientation. Effectively bans Black History Month and all similar recognitions.
    • Status: Senate- Cleared, House- Cleared
    • Passed: No
  • SCR3
    • Anti-marriage equality resolution
    • Status: Senate introduced
    • Passed: No
  • HF1049 & SF649
    • Entire HHS budget. Sec. 13 of SF649 and Sec. 14 of HF1049 both prohibit Medicaid dollars from being used for gender affirming care.
    • Status: Senate- Cleared, House- Cleared, Governor's signature- pending
    • Passed: Yes

For more information or updates on these bills, visit One Iowa Action.


As June approaches, some organizations are finessing how they show up for Pride celebrations this year. In conversations with our Supporter organizations, Catalyst finds that companies remain committed to LGBTQ+ inclusion in the workplace, but changes in the US landscape as well as economic uncertainty are prompting a more nuanced, measured approach. This doesn’t mean stepping back from support. It means showing up differently, with care, clarity, and intention.

This shift is especially visible in the United States, but global organizations — including those in Europe — are also reassessing how they engage, often finding ways to stay present and principled in locally resonant ways. Employees are watching these shifts closely, and companies have an opportunity to affirm their values through thoughtful, people-centered choices.

Although a recent survey of US executives found that 41% of companies said their Pride support would remain unchanged this year, 39% indicated that they would be reducing Pride month engagement, especially around highly visible external support. They are, however, generally maintaining their deep commitment internally.

Recognizing that each organization must make difficult decisions for short- and long-term success, here are suggestions for celebrating Pride in today’s landscape in a way that centers inclusion, protects people, and reflects your values. --Catalyst

Brenda Howard, Mother of Pride, marching

Bronx-born Brenda Howard discovered activism in the 1960s movement against the Vietnam War. Her activism soon included gay rights as well. Howard is known as the “Mother of Pride” for coordinating a rally followed by the Christopher Street Liberation Day March to commemorate the 1st Anniversary of the Stonewall Riot. She originated the idea for a week-long series of events around Pride Day which became the genesis of the annual LGBT Pride celebrations now held worldwide.

A fixture in New York City's LGBT community, Howard was active in the Coalition for Lesbian and Gay Rights, which helped guide New York City's LGBT rights law through the City Council in 1986. In 1987, Howard helped found the New York Area Bisexual Network to help coordinate services for the region's growing Bisexual community. Her ongoing activism included work on the 1993 March on Washington for Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Rights, where she was female co-chair of the leather contingent and helped lobby to have the term “Bisexuals” included in the title. --The Legacy Project

Check out some of these articles to learn more about Brenda and her accomplishments:

A lot of people consider the Stonewall Inn Riot to be the first Pride. Others believed it was the year after the riots when they had the first march. Either way, it was the beginning of something big and long-lasting. Take a gander at some of the articles we've found about the beginnings of Pride:

The First Pride Was a Riot: The Origins of Pride

This History of Pride

How Pride March Made History

Pride: Celebrating Diversity & Community

This Day in June

Over the years, as different forms of sexuality come forth and the legalization of same-sex marriage, people often wonder about the fight and purpose of pride. Is it the fight for liberation? How it originated? Or is it the fight for equality? Has it evolved? Please read over the definitions and articles below and let us know!

Liberation: A) The action of liberating (esp. from confinement or servitude); the condition of being liberated; release. Also: an instance of this.
                  B) Freedom from restrictive or discriminatory social conventions and attitudes.

               
   -- Oxford Dictionary

Equality: A) The condition of being equal in quantity, amount, value, intensity, etc.
               B) The condition of having equal dignity, rank, or privileges with others; the fact of being on an equal footing.
               C)  Equal chance and right to seek success in one's chosen sphere regardless of social factors such as class, race, religion, and sex.

             
 -- Oxford Dictionary

Sexual Liberation vs Identity Politics

Pride Issue: 'Radical Pursuits

LGBTQ + History

Generation: Stonewall

Let us know what you think!

Gilbert Baker Pride Flag                 1978 Pride Flag                 Traditional Gay Pride Flag 

    Gilbert Baker Pride                  1978 Pride                       Traditional Gay Pride

Philadelphia Pride Flag                 Progress Pride Flag                 Bisexual Pride Flag

Philadelphia Pride                Progress Pride                       Bisexual Pride

Pansexual Pride Flag                 Asexual Pride Flag                 Labrys Lesbian Pride Flag

       Pansexual Pride                    Asexual Pride                      Labrys Lesbian Pride

Polyamory Pride Flag                 Intersex Pride Flag                 Transgender Pride Flag

Polyamory Pride                   Intersex Pride                   Transgender Pride

Genderfluid Pride Flag                 Genderqueer Pride Flag                 Ally Pride Flag

                        Genderfluid Pride              Genderqueer Pride                       Ally Pride

Polysexual Pride Flag                 Aromantic Pride Flag                 Demisexual Pride Flag

Polysexual Pride                Aromantic Pride                  Demisexual Pride

Lesbian Pride Flag                 Demiromantic Pride Flag                 Nonbinary Pride Flag

   Lesbian Pride                     Demiromantic Pride             Nonbinary Pride

Queer POC Pride Flag                 Two-Spirit Pride Flag                Abrosexual Pride Flag

 Queer POC Pride                 Two-Spirit Pride                   Abrosexual Pride

Drag Pride Flag                 Agender Pride Flag                 Intersex-Inclusive Pride Flag

              Drag Pride                       Agender Pride              Intersex-Inclusive Pride

For more pride flags and their histories, Click Here!

 

Statue of Ganymede, or at least what they think he looked like

Ganymede, in Greek legend, the son of Tros (or Laomedon), king of Troy. Because of his unusual beauty, he was carried off either by the gods or by Zeus, disguised as an eagle, or, according to a Cretan account, by Minos, to serve as cupbearer. In compensation, Zeus gave Ganymede’s father a stud of immortal horses (or a golden vine). The earliest forms of the myth have no erotic content, but by the 5th century BC it was believed that Ganymede’s kidnapper had a homosexual passion for him; Ganymede’s kidnapping was a popular topic on 5th-century Attic vases. The English word catamite was derived from the popular Latin form of his name. He was later identified with the constellation Aquarius. --Britannica

To learn more about Ganymede, his mythology, and the artwork of him, click here!


Portrait of King Edward the Second of England

Edward II (1307-37) used the Medieval Palace at the Tower of London. The King and his favorite, his closest political and emotional ally, Piers Gaveston, are often thought to have been lovers. The truth will never be known, as medieval chroniclers didn’t record what happened between the two men behind closed doors. They did comment on the exceptional closeness of the relationship, recording the strength of Edward’s love for Gaveston when they first met in about 1297. Their love is often described at the time in fraternal terms, and they may have entered into a bond as ‘wed brothers’ or a ‘Bond of Brotherhood’. Edward never had a mistress, and even at his wedding banquet, the King is said to have given more attention to Gaveston than to his new Queen. --Historic Royal Palaces

For some awesome articles about LGBTQ relations in the Middle Ages, Click Here!

 

Portrait of Francis Bacon

1623: Francis Bacon, a noted gay man who coined the term “masculine love,” publishes “The Advancement of Learning—an argument for empirical research and against superstition.” This deductive system for empirical research earned him the title “the Father of Modern Science.”

Drawing depicting the trial of Richard Cornish

1624: Richard Cornish of the Virginia Colony is tried and hanged for sodomy.

1649: The first known conviction for lesbian activity in North America occurs in March when Sarah White Norman is charged with “lewd behavior” with Mary Vincent Hammon in Plymouth, Massachusetts.

Portrait of Julie d'Aubigny

1670-1707: Julie d'Aubigny, known under her stage name, La Maupin, was a bisexual, cross-dressing, swordswoman who killed at least three men in duels. Popular retellings of her brief but action-filled life sometimes focus more on the adventurous aspects of her life, glossing over her accomplishments in opera.

 

Drawing of Anne Bonny and Mary Read

The 1720s: Mary Read and Anne Bonny were two famous Pirates of the Caribbean. With all their journeys together and a life-or-death friendship, it is thought their relationship was more romantic than most think.

1749: Thomas Cannon wrote what may be the earliest published defense of homosexuality in English, “Ancient and Modern Pederasty Investigated and Exemplify'd.”

Portrait of Thomas Jefferson

1779: Thomas Jefferson revises Virginia law to make sodomy (committed by men or women) punishable by mutilation rather than death.

Portrait of We'Wha, a Zuni Native American from New Mexico

1886: We’wha, a Zuni Native American from New Mexico, is received by US President Grover Cleveland as a “Zuni Princess.” They are an accomplished weaver, potter, and the most famous Ihamana, a traditional Zuni gender role, now described as mixed-gender or Two-Spirit.

Portrait of Henry Gerber

1924: Henry Gerber forms the Society for Human Rights, the first gay group in the US, but the group is quickly shut down.

Portrait on Ma Rainey

1925: Blues singer Ma Rainey is arrested in her house in Harlem for having a lesbian party. Her protégé, Bessie Smith, bails her out of jail the following morning. Rainey and Smith were part of an extensive circle of lesbian and bisexual African‐American women in Harlem

1928: The Well of Loneliness, by Radclyffe Hall, is published in the United States. This sparks great legal controversy and brings the topic of homosexuality into public conversation.

Portrait of Alfred Kinsey

1948: Biologist and sex researcher Alfred Kinsey publishes "Sexual Behavior in the Human Male."

 

Picture of a bunch of men at a bar with one bartender, all are part of the Mattachine Society

1950: The first lasting gay organization, the Mattachine Society, is formed in Los Angeles. They refer to themselves as a “homophile” group. The group has existed for about a decade before splitting into smaller entities.

Portrait of Christine Jorgensen

1952: Christine Jorgensen is the first American who come forward publicly about being transgender and speaks openly about her experiences with gender confirmation surgery and hormone replacement therapy. Her transition causes an international sensation, and for many, she is the first visible transgender person in the media.

1953: President Eisenhower issued an executive order stating that those who had 'sexual perversion' could be a cause for the lack or termination of employment.

1955: The Daughters of Bilitis (DOB), considered to be the first lesbian rights organization, is formed by Del Martin and Phyllis Lyon in San Francisco, California. The group is conceived as a social alternative to lesbian bars, which were considered illegal and thus subject to raids and police harassment.

The Cover of a One, Inc. Magazine. It is blue with stars and "Maimi's New Type Witchhunt" and Homosexuality: A Break on Overpopulation" in the stars as headlines

1957: Supreme Court Case One Inc. v. Olesen was ruled in favor of One Inc. allowing the continuance of their freedom of speech over the topic of homosexuality. 

In the late 1950s, Government reports were released from the American Psychiatric Association and the American Psychological Association stating that being gay is a mental illness.

1961: Illinois becomes the first state in the US to repeal its sodomy laws against the LGBTQ Community.

Photo of men marching with signs that say "Opportunity", "Legality", and "No society can be great without ALL of the citizens"

1965: July 4th is Reminder Day for about four years. It is a day for those to remember the Stonewall Inn Riots in Philidelphia and protest for the same civil rights granted to those who are heterosexual.

Mattachine Society members Dick Leitsch, Craig Rodwell, and John Timmons at Howard Johnson's 415 Sixth Ave, April 21, 1966 for the sip-in

1966: The Mattachine Society had decided that the Illegalization of gay bars was going too far, so they devised a "Sip-in". This consisted of people going into a bar, declaring they were gay, ordering a drink, then waiting to be served or turned away, and then suing.

1966: After Compton's Cafeteria Riot, the National Transsexual Counseling Unit was formed. This was believed to be the world's first trans organization.

Photo of police clash with a protester at Stonewall in 1969.

1969: The Stonewall Inn Riots go down in history.

Picture of the front of the reminder day march. A crowd of people walking down the street with a giant banner over their heads saying "Gay Pride day 72"

1970: The Reminder March that had once happened in Philadelphia officially moves from July to June and takes place in New York City.

1972: A bill was passed by Harvey Milk in San Francisco to ban discrimination in housing and employment based on someone's sexual orientation.

1973: The American Psychiatric Association removed the diagnosis of "homosexuality" from the second edition of its Diagnostic and Statistical Manual. 

Portrait of Kathy Kozachenko

1974: Kathy Kozachenko, while still in college, ran for Ann Arbor City Council in Michigan and won. She had become the first out LGBTQ person ever elected in the US.

1976: Anita Bryant, once loved for her stardom and evangelical views, took a dramatic dive when she decided to start an anti-gay campaign named "Save Our Children".

A picture of Harvey Milk (left) and Dan White (right)

1978: Dan White, a former member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, assassinated Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone on the basis that Milk was gay and Moscone was friends with him. His sentence was cut short, which led to a ton of protests and riots, not just from the LGBTQ community.

1979: After the assassination of Harvey Milk, gay and lesbian organizations finally came together to organize a march in Washington, D.C. for Lesbian and Gay rights.

Picture of one of the first men to contract AIDS getting a hug for support

1982: The first case of AIDS was diagnosed, propelling the world into a homophobic mindset and losing the support of the government administration. At this time, 54% of cases of people having AIDS have died.

1982: Wisconsin becomes the first U.S. State to outlaw discrimination based on sexual orientation. 

Picture of the first ACT UP March in 1988

1987: ACT UP international organization, was founded. It was made to bring attention to the AIDS epidemic and help find a cure for AIDS while providing accurate information, help, and awareness about the disease.

1987: The annual march in DC had made a spike in people, as it was the height of the AIDS epidemic. The march was altogether five days of rallies, political forums, and lobbying. At one point, several gay leaders were to take part in a demonstration on the steps of the Supreme Court, protesting the Court's 1986 decision upholding a Georgia statute outlawing sodomy.

Back of a 1988 Understanding AIDS brochure

1988: The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) releases a brochure to educate Americans on what and how to help those with AIDS.

1988: World AIDS Day was established on December 1st,1988. Although this wasn't made 'official' until President Joe Biden in 2022.

1990: Congress enacts the Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS Resources Emergency (CARE) Act. This is an AIDS/HIV program that was created to improve the quality and availability of HIV care and treatment for low-income people with HIV.

Picture of actor Jeremy Irons wearing a red ribbon as he hosts the 45th Tony Awards in 1991

1991: American soldiers serving in the Gulf War chose to wear red ribbons as a way of solidarity and compassion with those with HIV and their caregivers. This led to not only the Red Ribbon Project but also, in 1992, upwards of 100,000 were worn during Freddie Mercury's performance in Wembley Stadium for the AIDS Awareness Tribute Concert.

1993: President Bill Clinton enacted "Don't Ask, Don't Tell", stating that the military can't discriminate against or harass closeted gay or bisexual people, BUT will continue to bar openly gay or bisexual people from serving.

Picture of a newspaper stating "Amendment 2 Struck Down" with a picture of two people smiling happily

1996: In Colorado, an amendment was brought forth and fought over until it reached the Supreme Court. This law singled out homosexual and bisexual persons, imposing restrictions on their rights to seek and receive specific legal protection from discrimination. In a 6-to-3 decision, the amendment was denied.

1996: President Bill Clinton signed the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) into law. It declared that no state shall be required to recognize same-gender marriage performed in another state. It also defined marriage as an act between only a man and a woman.

A picture of Coretta Scott King with the quote "Struggle is a neverending process. Freedom is never really won. You earn it and win it in every generation."

The Late 1990s: Martin Luther King Jr.'s widow, Coretta Scott King, also stood up for the LGBTQ community, regardless of the criticisms from civil rights activists and her own children. She is known to say: "Martin Luther King Jr. said, ‘Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.’ I appeal to everyone who believes in Martin Luther King Jr.’s dream to make room at the table of brotherhood and sisterhood for lesbian and gay people."

Picture of Sherry Corbin, left, Beth Robinson and Susan Murray reacting Tuesday as the Vermont legislature approved same-sex marriage

2000: Vermont became the first state in the US to legalize same-sex marriage after its law was challenged for the inequality of state marriage statutes. 

2003: Lawrence v. Texas, a legal case in which the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on June 26, 2003, that a Texas state law criminalizing certain intimate sexual conduct between two consenting adults of the same sex was unconstitutional.

2003: Massachusetts legalizes gay marriage in the Goodridge v. Massachusetts Department of Public Health

Logo for Logo Cable Channel Network

2005:  Logo cable channel has blazed a trail as the first commercial cable network made for the LGBTQ+ community, with a diverse collection of content aimed at celebrating queer culture through scripted television, online exclusives, and more.

2008:  Proposition 8 added a new section to the state Constitution which provides that "Only marriage between a man and a woman is valid or recognized in California." 

2009: Presidential Memorandum on Federal Benefits and Non-Discrimination was established to allow same-sex couples the same work-based health benefits as married couples.

resident Barack Obama greets Louvon Harris, left, Betty Byrd Boatner, right, both sisters of James Byrd, Jr., and Judy Shepard, center, mother of Matthew Shepard, following his remarks on the the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act in the East Room of the White House, Oct. 28, 2009.

2009: The Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr., Hate Crimes Prevention Act of 2009 provides funding and technical assistance to state, local, and tribal jurisdictions to help them to more effectively investigate and prosecute hate crimes.

Supporters of same-sex marriage march along Spring Street in front of City Hall in downtown Los Angeles in preparation for a series of nationwide protests against Proposition 8, which denied gay couples the right to wed in California.

2010: Prop 8 (Proposition 8) was ruled unconstitutional by a federal district court in 2010, although that decision did not go into effect until 2013, following the conclusion of Prop 8 advocates' appeals, which went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court.

2011: President Barack Obama signs the official repeal of the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" bill. This included allowing those who were discharged for being in the LGBTQ+ community the opportunity to re-enlist and giving future recruits a discrimination-free enlistment.

2011: The Defenseless: Defending Against Marriage Act challenged Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), which defines marriage for federal purposes as only between a man and a woman.

2013: Only a few years after President Obama declared DOMA unconstitutional and instructed the Justice Department to stop defending it in court, the Supreme Court advanced marriage equality through key decisions in 2013.

2015: Obergfell v. Hodges was a court case that challenged the refusal to recognize same-sex marriages depending on the state as unconstitutional. 

Protesters hold a pro-gay-rights flag outside the US Supreme Court on Saturday, countering the demonstrators who attended the March For Marriage in Washington, D.C. The Supreme Court meets on Tuesday to hear arguments over whether same-sex couples have a constitutional right to wed in the United States, with a final decision expected in June.

2015: The U.S. legalized marriage equality on the federal level for all 50 states.

George Segal's "Gay Liberation" sculpture at Christopher Park was commissioned in 1979.

2016: Stonewall National Monument was established on June 24th. Days earlier (on June 12th), one of the deadliest mass shootings in the United States happened at the Pulse Nightclub in Florida.

2017: The beginning of the increasing transgender population starts to cause massive debates about how to continue with gendered sports and the allowance of those who are transgender within which sports bracket.

2020: Learning more about the state of the LGBTQ+ community during the COVID-19 pandemic.

LGBTQ rights demonstrators rally outside the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., October 2019.

2021: Discrimination towards the LGBTQ+ community impacts their health and healthcare

2021: There are more trans and non-binary politicians setting forth in the world of politics

2021: The Pentagon releases new policies enabling transgender people to serve in the military

Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) holds up banned books as he chaired a House Oversight and Reform Committee panel hearing that examined why thousands of books have been banned from public schools across the country

2022: The increase in governments banning LGBTQ+ character books from libraries. 

2022: Discrimination and Barriers to Well-Being in the Community

2023: The gender you select does not need to match the gender on your supporting documentation, such as a birth certificate, previous passport, or state ID. We no longer require medical documentation to change the gender marker on your U.S. passport. You can select male, female, unspecified, or another gender identity (X) as your gender marker if you are applying for a U.S. passport book and selecting routine service.

Banner for Disneyland After Dark: Pride Night 2023

2023: Disneyland officially announces the first-ever Disney After Dark: Pride Night

2024: More and more individual states introduce anti-LGBTQ+ bills. The states that have introduced the most include: Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Mississippi, Tennessee, South Carolina, West Virginia, and New Hampshire.

2024: Half of the states in the U.S. prohibit transgender girls from playing school sports, and half have banned or criminalized at least some forms of medically indicated healthcare.

2025: The Presidential Project 2025 has been enacted. The plan includes firing federal employees who oppose or insufficiently support right-wing policies, ending access to abortion and contraception, and eliminating protections for LGBTQ people. The document even calls for erasing LGBTQ-inclusive language throughout federal agencies, such as “the terms sexual orientation and gender identity (“SOGI”), diversity, equity, and inclusion, gender, gender equality, gender equity, gender awareness, gender-sensitive, abortion, reproductive health, reproductive rights.”