New york city gay pride parade 2022

Pride March NYC: guide to the parade, street closures and best places to watch

New York City's monumental Pride celebrations have a deep and important history in the city. The first march was held in one year after the Stonewall Uprising, and the event has grown into an annual civil rights demonstration. Fast forward to , and a Pride march feels just as important and relevant as it did 55 years ago: Earlier this year, the government erased mention of trans people on the Stonewall National Monument's website. 

While many colloquially call the event the Pride Celebration, organizers refer to it as The March as a nod to the event’s heritage. After all, the first march was once an unpermitted political protest against anti-LGBTQ+ policies and attitudes.

This year, activists and allies will take to the streets (and later NYC’s same-sex attracted bars) in support of global LGBTQ+ rights at the NYC Pride Parade on Sunday, June In recent years, The March has grown to include more than groups with millions of spectators.

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New York City’s annual pride parade kicked off Sunday with glittering confetti, fluttering rainbow flags and newfound fears about losing freedoms won through decades of activism.

The annual parade takes place just two days after one conservative justice on the Supreme Court signaled, in a ruling on abortion, that the court should reconsider the right to same-sex marriage known in

“We’re here to make a statement," said year-old Mercedes Sharpe, who traveled to Manhattan from Massachusetts. “I think it’s about making a signal, rather than all the other years like how we normally celebrate it. This one’s really gonna stand out. I think a lot of mad people, not even just women, annoyed men, angry women."

The warning shot from the nation's foremost court came after a year of legislative defeats for the LGBTQ people, including the corridor of laws in some states limiting the discussion of sexual orientation or gender identity with children.

As anti-gay sentiments resurface, some are pushing for identity festival parades to send back to their roots — less as blocks-long street parties but overtly

Where to Celebrate Pride in Modern York State

Pride is always an exciting time in New York, and is bringing a jam-packed lineup of meaningful and playfulness events all across the express. Highlights include the iconic NYC Pride March, illumination of Niagara Falls in Pride colors, and Pride Night with the Syracuse Mets. At these and other Lgbtq+ fest events in New York, LGBTQ New Yorkers and visitors will come together again in the birthplace of the modern movement to show love for each other, for the community, and for New York! Photo credit: Getty Images

Updated 05/13/

Pride in the Sky (Hudson Valley) 

Kick off the season of Pride in the Hudson Valley on the Passage Over the Hudson! Start the morning off with a rainbow-hued fun run/walk over the Passage or grab your binoculars for Queer Wings + Wild Things Pride Birding excursion. In the afternoon, pop by community festivals on either side of the bridge and get your four-legged family in on the Event celebration with a Pet Pawrade with prizes for the optimal looks! Be sure to reside for the memorable main event, the Prid

Teen girls shot outside historic Stonewall Inn after NYC's Pride March

An LGBTQ+ Celebration parade ended in gunfire near New York City's historic Stonewall Inn on Sunday night, according to Mayor Eric Adams.

"Saddened to learn about the shooting by the Stonewall Inn tonight as Pride celebrations were winding down," Adams wrote on X, adding, "During a time when our city should be rejoicing and celebrating members of our diverse Queer community, incidents like this are devastating."

Two teenage girls were injured in a shooting, according to Fresh York ABC station WABC, which cited police. A year-old girl was shot in the head and taken to the hospital in critical condition. A second girl, who was 17, was shot in the leg and taken to the hospital in stable condition.

The shooting appears to have stemmed from some sort of conflict, though the motive is unclear and no arrests have been made at this point in the investigation, WABC reported.

Shots rang out just after 10 p.m. at 3 Sheridan Square, in Manhattan's Greenwich Village neighborhood.

A gun was