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What Is Pride Month? Everything to Know About the LGBTQ+ Celebration

NEED TO KNOW

  • Pride Month is observed each June to honor the 1969 Stonewall Uprising, a turning point in the LGBTQ+ rights movement. The first Pride march was held a year later, making 2025 its 55th anniversary
  • The rainbow flag, designed by artist Gilbert Baker in 1978, has become a global symbol of LGBTQ+ pride and visibility
  • Events throughout Pride Month include parades, protests, drag shows and memorials — celebrating LGBTQ+ identity and honoring lives lost to HIV/AIDS

June is Pride Month, a time to celebrate the LGBTQ+ community’s myriad contributions to American culture and history. Though the fight for equality continues — the ACLU reports there are currently 597 pieces of anti-LGBTQ+ legislation under consideration across the U.S. — there’s also progress, resilience and plenty to be proud of.

“You belong in America. While we see attacks against our community from the federal government and too many state governments, also know that we have millions of people who are fighting alongside [the LGBTQ+ community], to fight for you and to deliver progress for all of us,” Sarah McBride — the first out transgender member of Congress — told PEOPLE in February 2025, sharing words of encouragement to young queer people in the nation.

According to the Library of Congress, Pride was first federally recognized as Gay and Lesbian Pride Month on June 11, 1999, by former President Bill Clinton. A decade later, former President Barack Obama expanded the designation to include bisexual and transgender people. (However, the month welcomes all identities within the LGBTQ+ community, including asexual, pansexual, intersex, nonbinary, allies and more.)

Read on to learn more about the history of Pride Month — and why it matters more than ever.

What is Pride Month?

Crowds at Los Angeles Pride Parade on June 9, 2024 in Los Angeles, California.

Caylo Seals/Sipa USA via AP


Pride Month is an entire month dedicated to uplifting LGBTQ+ voices, celebrating LGBTQ+ culture and supporting LGBTQ+ rights.

Throughout the month of June, nationwide, there have traditionally been parades, protests, drag performances, live theater, memorials and celebrations of life for members of the community who lost their lives to HIV/AIDS. It is part political activism, part celebration of all the LGBTQ+ community has achieved over the years.

What is the pride symbol?

A general view of the exterior of the Stonewall Inn in New York City on March 13, 2012.
Ben Hider/Getty Images

You probably knew that the rainbow flag — created by artist Gilbert Baker in 1978 — is used as a symbol of LGBTQ+ pride, but did you know that each color on the flag has its own meaning? In the widely known six-color flag, red is symbolic of life, orange is symbolic of healing, yellow is sunshine, green is nature, blue represents harmony and purple is spirit. In the original eight-color flag, hot pink was included to represent sex and turquoise to represent magic/art.

There have been many variations on the flag. In 2021, the flag was altered by graphic designer Daniel Quasar to honor intersectional identities within the community, including black to represent diversity, brown to represent inclusivity and light blue, pink and white, which are the colors of the trans pride flag. That same year, activist Valentino Vecchietti added the intersex flag to Quasar’s Progress Pride Flag, with yellow portraying those who do not fit the gender binary and the purple circle symbolizing the wholeness of the intersex community.

Why is Pride Month celebrated in June?

Crowd attempts to impede police arrests outside the Stonewall Inn in Greenwich Village in New York City on June 28, 1969.
NY Daily News Archive/Getty

We celebrate Pride in June to coincide with the catalyst of the Gay Liberation Movement, which was the Stonewall Uprising. In the early morning hours of June 28, 1969, police raided a popular gay bar in N.Y.C.’s Greenwich Village, the Stonewall Inn. This was commonplace for the time, but on this particular evening, the patrons of the bar fought back, starting the Stonewall Riots, which went on for days.

The Stonewall Inn was declared a historic landmark by the city of New York in 2015 and later named a national monument by former President Barack Obama in 2016.

Sham Ibrahim attends the premiere of FNL Network’s “Courtney” on September 3, 2019 in Beverly Hills, California.

Tibrina Hobson/Getty


This June is the 55th anniversary of the first Pride parade, which happened in 1970, one year after the uprising.

“As a proud transgender American, I feel that pride is more important than ever this year,” Sham Ibrahim, TV personality from MTV’s Catfish, told PEOPLE in 2023. “Our community has had to fight hard against discrimination in the past, and 2023 is no different. While we have made so much progress since the days of Stonewall, discrimination still exists — especially against the transgender community.”

Who were the major figures involved?

Marsha P. Johnson posing for a photo, used in the 2017 Netflix documentary ‘The Death and Life of Marsha P. Johnson’.
Netflix

Marsha P. Johnson is often credited with throwing the first punch at the Stonewall Inn (though there are many prominent figures who are also rumored to have done so). She was a Black trans woman celebrating her 25th birthday at the time of the riots and a tour de force in the gay community. She died in 1992 at just 46 years old after police found her body in the Hudson River — her death was initially ruled a suicide, despite friends and loved ones insisting that could not be the case.

Sylvia Rivera was an activist and self-professed drag queen who also played a part in the Stonewall Riots. She fought for transgender rights alongside Johnson, creating S.T.A.R. (Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries) to help unhoused LGBTQ+ youth. She advocated for transgender rights until she died in 2002.

Stormé DeLarverie was a gay rights activist and drag performer who was also at Stonewall when it was raided that night. Her friend, Lisa Cannistraci, told The New York Times upon her death in 2014, “Nobody knows who threw the first punch, but it’s rumored that she did, and she said she did. She told me she did.”

Here are some easy ways to celebrate Pride:

Participants attend the 2025 WeHo Pride Parade on June 1, 2025 in West Hollywood, California.

Araya Doheny/Getty




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