Solidarity Through Pride
In June, Bostonians celebrated the 46th annual Pride Month, which featured the annual Pride Parade from Copley Square to City Hall Plaza, the Pride Festival on City Hall Plaza, and the Pride Block Parties in the Back Bay and Jamaica Plain. As Boston Pride nears its half-century, attendance and support continues to grow with the Parade breaking numerous records for spectators and participation. This year’s festivities were also marked, however, by continued resolve and solidarity, as the organization’s annual Block Parties took place merely hours after the tragedy in Orlando on June 12th.
Community members voted on this year’s theme, Solidarity Through Pride, a particularly relevant foundation upon which the Boston’s LGBTQ+ community could build upon to amplify its message of love and unity. Boston Pride president Sylvain Bruni describes the theme as a “call for solidarity and support among all parts of our community.” This year’s Pride Month featured a stronger emphasis on intersectionality, the overlapping of social identities, and attendees found themselves able to participate in Youth Pride, Latin@ Pride, and Black Pride, complementary programs seeking to provide space for historically underrepresented identities.
Back Bay, City Hall Plaza, Jamaica Plain, and the numerous other locales that hosted Pride Month events found themselves spilling over in great celebration. This year, the Pride Parade, the most famous and historic event of Pride Month, had an estimated 500,000 spectators, 35,000 marchers, 257 contingents, and 28 floats, making it the parade with the greatest number of participants in the organization’s history.
The attacks on the gay community on June 12th added an air of poignancy and gravity to the rest of Pride Month, but the community was able to find strength in their solidarity, creating space for both reflection and celebration. The Back Bay and Jamaica Plain Block Parties held moments of silence for the victims their families, and the LGBTQ+ community at large. Mayor Marty Walsh joined Boston Pride to host a vigil on City Hall Plaza on the Monday after the attack at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando. Also in attendance were Governor Charlie Baker and Massachusetts Speaker of the House Bob Deleo.[1]
Parade Marshals
Grand Marshal: Claire B. Naughton – LGBT ally and longtime activist for gay rights within the Democratic Party and in the labor community.
Honorary Marshal: Bayard Rustin – Civil right and gay rights activist, organizer
Parade Marshal: Raffi Freedman- Gurspan – White House LGBT liaison and Outreach and Recruitment Director for Presidental Personnel
Pride Pageant Winners
Mr Boston Pride – Ian Mcleod
Miss Boston Pride – Kamden T. Rage
Festival/Concert Entertainers
Conrad Sewell (Headliner), Additional Performers: Samantha J, Brandon Skeie, Hunter Valentine, Long Arm Rex, Nikita Le Femme, Samantha Johnson, MRF, Flatline Poetry and DJ Joe Bermudez
Block Party DJs
Back Bay Block Party – DJ Jalil Z & DJ Andrea
JP Block Party – DJ LeahV
Pride by the Numbers
535,000+ Parade Viewers
35,000 Parade Marchers
257 Groups Marched
28 Floats
xxx Festival Vendors
125,000+ Festival Attendees
xxx Bay Block Party Attendees
xxx JP Block Party Attendees
11 Community Fund grantees
2016 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
Event Details
Date: Pride Month – June 1-30, 2016
Theme: Solidarity Through Pride
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