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Photograph by Jerome McClendon for the AJC. J– Atlanta Gay Rights Alliance banner in gay pride parade, Atlanta, Georgia. The Gay Pride Planning Committee renames itself the Gay Rights Alliance. Angry conservatives form Citizens for a Decent Atlanta, call for Jackson’s resignation. Mayor Maynard Jackson issues a “Gay Pride Day” proclamation. Gay Pride celebrates the theme “Christopher St. The Barb bills itself as “the groovy newspaper covering Atlanta and the Southeast” Cruise is a gay bar guide. Local gay media outlets founded in the year before now cover Pride, with attendance estimated at 600. The Atlanta Lesbian Feminist Alliance, formed in 1972, fields the first openly lesbian softball team to play in the city league, and helps coordinate Lesbian & Gay Pride Day. John’s apartment on drug charges many believe to be fabricated. John is fired from his job as a copy carrier for distributing Gay Pride fliers. Gays picket the Atlanta Journal-Constitution after Charlie St. Gay Pride continues to grow, although some marchers wear paper bags over their heads to demonstrate the dangers of coming out. Pride is viewed by some gay businesses as too radical, and two large gay bars throw out activists distributing Pride fliers. He is the city’s first openly gay appointee. John is appointed by Atlanta Mayor Sam Massell to the city’s Community Relations Commission. GLF again sponsors the event, but dissolves the next year. Over 300 march in the next Gay Pride, which is covered widely by local television. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution covers the march and estimates attendance at 50 GLF estimates 125. GLF sponsors Atlanta’s first “Gay Liberation Day march down Peachtree Street to Piedmont Park. The march received no media coverage, and no known records remain.ĭemocratic party activist Bill Smith legally incorporates the revolutionary Gay Liberation Front, following the trend of GLF groups springing up around the country. On the first anniversary of the Stonewall Riots, about 100 activists march down Peachtree Street. October marks LGBT History Month and it is crucial we remember our history and honor those who came before us. In 1968, when lesbians, gay men, drag queens and gender non-conformists fought back against a police raid at the New York Stonewall Inn, they had no idea they would be kick starting a movement that continues to this day, one that spread throughout the nation and the world. And what a long, fabulous trip it’s been to get here. This year marks the 44 th annual Atlanta Pride festival.