HISTORY OF PRIDE ST. LOUIS

For over fourty-five years, Pride St. Louis, Inc. has been working to raise understanding and acceptance of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer (LGBTQ+) individuals in our community. We are not a political group, but rather a community-based organization that envisions a world where diversity can be celebrated and prejudice has been eradicated. We welcome you to join us for a meeting, a workshop, or a special event. As an organization, we are working each and every day to bring about meaningful change right here in St. Louis.

What would become known as the "St. Louis Lesbian & Gay Pride Celebration Committee" was born in 1979, but the first St. Louis Pride Celebration didn’t occur until 1980. The event was sponsored by the Magnolia Committee – named for the street where the majority of the members lived and had their meetings. Their combined effort with a second organization resulted in a weeks worth of activities held in April of 1980. At the end of the week, hundreds gathered for “The Lesbians and Gays Walk for Charity” which progressed down Lindell Boulevard in the Central West End to Washington University’s quadrangle. These two groups combined to become the St. Louis Lesbian & Gay Pride Celebration Committee.

During the same time, writer Jim Thomas invited representatives from organizations around town to begin discussions for an annual celebration. It was to be held in June as a tribute to the Stonewall Riots, which occurred the last weekend of June in 1969. Each participating organization, still able to keep their identity in individual events, would form a larger group – thereby creating a greater whole. At the time, the celebration consisted of a picnic in the beginning of the week and a march at the end.

Thus began a tradition which is still strong today in St. Louis. June is now officially recognized as LGBTQ+ Pride Month, and since the first PrideFest in 1981, St. Louis' own event has grown in size, attendance, and scope. A Pride Festival takes on a huge importance for our community because it allows people to feel proud of who they are. We provide them a safer place to be who they wish to be, and that empowerment can be a life-altering experience.

1986 Miss Gay Illinois, Georgia Brown at Pride (From STL LGBT History Project)


PFLAG in the Grand Pride Parade, 1991 (From STL LGBT History project)

Lesbians and Gays Walk for Charity down Market Street in St. Louis.

Festival Button, 1987 (From STL LGBT History project)

Magnolia Committee Banner, 1980 (From STL LGBT History project)

1990 Pride GuideCover (From STL LGBT History project)

1993 PrideFest at the World’s Fair Pavilion in Forest Park (From STL LGBT History project)