After 2016's election, the following year's theme couldn't have been more timely: "Rise, Resist, Unite." (Courtesy of GLBT Historical Society, via Lenore Chinn)
55 Years of Queer Joy: A Photographic Journey through San Francisco Pride
27 June
After 2016's election, the following year's theme couldn't have been more timely: "Rise, Resist, Unite." (Courtesy of GLBT Historical Society, via Lenore Chinn)
SF Pride takes on its 55th year June 28-29, with an important theme: "Queer Joy is Resistance. The famed parade starts on Sunday at Market and Beale Streets and ends up at Civic Center, where there will be multiple stages for live performances and more than 300 exhibitors and community booths.
No matter how Pride changes from year to year, the message remains the same: inclusivity, acceptance, and love. Take a look back at some of the city's most memorable rainbow moments.
(Courtesy of SFPL)
A crowd of people at the reflecting pool at Civic Center during Gay Freedom Day in 1974. After this, both North Baker Beach and Marshall Beach were legally designated as clothing optional.
(Courtesy of SFPL)
A gaggle of drag queens leaning and posing on red car during SF Gay Freedom Day — which was subjected around United for Freedom, Diversity is our Strength — circa June of 1976.
(Courtesy of SFPL)
A country man we can all get behind who marched in Gay Freedom Day SF in 1977.
(Courtesy of SFPL)
Scott Smith with Castro Camera display walking in Gay Freedom Day parade in 1976.
(Courtesy of SFPL)
Dykes on Bikes, at the International Lesbian & Gay Freedom Day Parade, 1981. Since the inception of Dykes on Bikes in 1976, lesbian riders have been a highlight of SF Pride.
(Courtesy of SFPL)
1977's San Francisco Gay and Lesbian Freedom Day Parade on Market Street, with parade partakers holding signs of Facists and Anita Bryant. The theme that year? "Gay Frontiers: Past, Present, Future."
(Courtesy of Pinterest)
PDA in full, crotch-grabbing-swing during International Lesbian & Gay Freedom Day Parade at Civic Center in 1986.
(Courtesy of SFPL)
Adrienne Fuzee, curator for the San Francisco Arts Commission, and Barbara during Gay Pride Parade at Civic Center in 1986
(Courtesy of GLBT Historical Society via Saul Bloomberg and Sandra Hoover Photography)
Taken on a rooftop overlook The Castro in 1989 during that year's SF Pride Parade, which marked the 20th anniversary of the Stonewall riots.
(Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons)
A few of the many creatively worded signages that bobbed up and down the During International Lesbian and Gay Freedom Day Parade in 1993. And yes: Napa Vally is full of fruits.
(Courtesy of SFPL)
San Francisco General Hospital AIDS Ward staff marching down Market Street for International Lesbian and Gay Freedom Day Parade in 1988, right at the hieght of the AIDS crisis.
(Courtesy of SFPL)
A group of women on stilts celebrating SF Gay Pride at the Civic Center, sometime either in 2001 or 2002.
(Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons)
(Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons)
Carnaval-inspired float, well, floating down Market Street during the 2005 Pride Parade.
(Courtesy of SFPL)
A group of costumed entertainers —lead by none other than a corseted drag queen, embellished with a large, sewn lip across her nether regions — performing a number during SF Pride in 2007.
(Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons)
The San Francisco Gay Men's Chorus (SFGMC) riding the "USS Metaphor" during the 2008 Pride Parade.
(Courtesy of GLBT Historical Society via Daniel Nicoletta)
John Lews and Stuart Gaffney standing for marriage equality while marching (riding?) in 2012's SF Pride, having tied the know in California back in 2008.
(Courtesy of GLBT Historical Society, via Lenore Chinn)
After 2016's election, the following year's theme couldn't have been more timely: "Rise, Resist, Unite."
(Courtesy of GLBT Hisotrical Society via Jane Philomen Cleland)
Michael Johnstone and his partner David Faulk — as Mrs. Vera of Verasphere; she was the the Community Grand Marshal for 2017's SF Pride parade.
(Courtesy of @sreermn)
In 2019, many parade-goers took the opportunity to show their support for Pete Buttigieg, the first openly gay candidate to launch a major United States presidential campaign.
(Courtesy of David Yu/Flickr)
Stilt walkers stand tall in 2022 after the Pride Parade returns after a two-year Covid-induced hiatus
Find more coverage of San Francisco Pride at 7x7.com/lgbtq-pride.