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2019 Looking Back. Loving Forward.
The 49th Boston Pride Parade and Festival set new records.

The Boston Pride parade included a record-breaking 431 contingents and over 50,000 marchers who marched along the 2.27-mile route from Copley Square to City Hall Plaza lined with an estimated 1-million spectators.

The Pride Festival at City Hall Plaza was filled with activity all day long including 130 vendors, a Family Fun Zone and headline entertainers Todrick Hall, Robin S. and Beth Sacks who drew huge crowds.

One of the highlights of this year’s Pride Parade were the two large flags that will also be appearing in World Pride in New York City on June 29. The Unity Flag, a patchwork quilt flag that represents intersectionality and unity in the LGBTQ community, and the River of Pride Flag, a quarter-mile long rainbow flag both ended the Pride Parade.

“This year’s parade was both a celebration and a reflection of this yearâ’s theme “Looking Back, Loving Forward” a recognition of the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall Uprising and the challenges and victories our community has faced over the years,”  said Linda DeMarco, President of Boston Pride. “We are wicked proud for all the support from our community and allies to help make this year’s parade one for the record books with one-million attendees and more contingents than we have ever had.”

Another highlight was two Stonewall veterans, Charles Evans and Paul Glass of Falmouth, Mass., who joined Grand Marshal Dale Mitchell during the parade. Mitchell, Evans and Glass are all veterans of the Stonewall Inn Uprising in 1969 in Greenwich Village as they witnessed the aftermath of the raid on Stonewall and the clashes with patrons and police officers. Stonewall is widely acknowledged as a defining event in the U.S. LGBTQ movement.

Mayor Martin J. Walsh kicked-off the parade on Saturday, June 8th with a ribbon-cutting featuring Boston Pride Committee members.

Pride Week included more than 50 events throughout the community, which started with the annual Rainbow Pride Flag Raising on City Hall Plaza, followed by Pride Day @ Faneuil Hall and the High Heel Dash for Charity, the Stonewall50 Community Forum where a panel discussed the significance of the Stonewall riots in 1969, Pride Lights honoring victims of HIV/AIDS, block parties in the Back Bay and Jamaica Plain and ended with Pride Night @ Fenway where the Red Sox donated 100 tickets to Pride youth groups.

Pride Sponsors helped to fund costs associated with the parade, festival and other free public events, and 10 percent of all sponsorships are dedicated to the Boston Pride Community Fund, which supports grassroots LGBTQ organizations.

This year, Boston Pride distributed a record amount of over $46,000 to 24 grassroots organizations. Since 2016, Boston Pride Community Fund has awarded almost $100,000 to 60 local grassroots organizations, supporting the mission of promoting social justice for the LGBTQ community.[1]

“Looking Back, Loving Forward.” In honor of the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall Riots, the theme points to how far the fight for LBGTQ+ rights has come. The theme also highlights the importance of the Stonewall Riots (also sometimes called the Stonewall Uprising or the Stonewall Rebellion) as one of the catalysts of the gay liberation movement. The gay civil rights movement of the early 1970’s helped provide a foundation for modern LGBTQ+ rights efforts. Early activists paved the way for the efforts toward full civil rights that are ongoing.

Parade Marshals

Grand Marshal – Dale Mitchell
Parade Marshal – Ava Glasscott
Honorary Marshal – Chris Harris
Champion of Stonewall Honorary Marshal – Marsha P. Johnson

Pride Pageant Winners

King and Queen of Boston Pride 2019 Gil Pimentel and Ania Bangkoks

Festival/Concert Entertainers

Headliners – Todrick Hall; Robin S. and Beth Sacks
Performers: All Eyes On Me, Taija New, The Spots, Kate Kennedy, First Lady Sarita, QWAM,

Block Party DJS/Performers

Back Bay Block Party – DJ Dan Slater and DJ Dena
JP Block Party – DJ LeahV, Emcee Sapphira Cristal

Pride by the Numbers

1,000,000 Pride Parade Viewers
50,000 Pride Parade Marchers
431 Groups Marched
130 Festival Vendors

Cover of the Boston Pride Guide 2019, Vol. 5 - Looking Back, Loving Forward
Cover of the Boston Pride Guide 2019, Vol. 5 - Looking Back, Loving Forward

2019 Boston Pride Photo Galleries

Click on the buttons below to view the event photo gallery. Note: You will be taken to the Boston Pride Smugmug Website

King & Queen Pride Pageant
Fri. May 17, 2019
May 31, 2019. Boston, MA. Boston Pride reception and rainbow flag raising at Boston City Hall. © 2019 Marilyn Humphries
Flag Raising Ceremony at City Hall Plaza
Fri. May 31, 2019
Pride Family Movie Night
Fri. May 31, 2019
Pride Day @ Faneuil Hall
Sat. June 1, 2019
Stonewall 50 Community Forum
Mon. June 3, 2019
Pride Lights
Tues. June 4, 2019
Boston Pride Parade
Sat. June 8, 2019
Boston Pride Festival & Concert
Sat. June 8, 2019
Back Bay Block Party
Sun. June 9, 2019
JP Block Party
Sun. June 9, 2019
Pride Night @ Fenway Park
Tues. June 11, 2019
River of Pride and Unity Flags
Rooftop Views
LGBTQ Historical Highlights
  • After an early start the legislature bans the practice of conversion therapy on minors
  • Activists worldwide celebrate Stonewall 50; the Boston Pride Committee holds a series of events in Boston for the occasion, and participates in the World Pride march in New York[2]
Event Details

Date: June 8, 2019

Theme: Looking Back. Loving Forward.

Organized by: New Boston Pride Committee, Inc.

Parade Route

START – Copley Sq., Right on Clarendon St., Left on Tremont,. Right on Berkeley St,, Right on Boylston St., Left on Charles St., Right on Beacon St., Left on Tremont St. to Cambridge St., END – City Hall Plaza

Links of Interest
References:
[2] A LGBTQ Historical Timeline, Compiled by Attorney Don Gorton of the Boston Pride Stonewall Committee