History in Houston, 40 Years after Stonewall

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STONEWALL TO HOUSTON







How did we get here? A major building block in the GLBT History of Houston began in response to the "singing orange juice lady", Anita Bryant. Click here to hear her sing!

In 1977 Anita Bryant was to appear in Houston, Texas for a singing engagement. Having previously demonstrated her disapproval of homosexuals,

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thousands of protestors took to the streets and began a march which has grown into what is now Houston's Pride Parade.

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What began as a small unrehearsed march in Downtown Houston has resulted in one of the largest Pride celebrations in the United States. Each year Houston's pride festival bring a new theme. One of the most visible displays of this theme is the posters, t-shirts and flyers that are distributed throughout the city. Some of these flyers are listed below:<gallery Caption="Houston Pride"> Image:Pride89.gif Image: This momentum started in 1977 led to one of our most signifant GLBT movements, Town Hall Meeting 1.

Another similarly powerful moment is captured in records from the 1977 National Organization of Women convention, when lesbians campaigned for visibility in the organization through a dramatic release of colored balloons during the meeting in the Astrodome.

Fueled by the power of Stonewall, Houston's GLBT community could no longer be silent!

In 1985, Mayor Louis Welch, who while running for re-election, made a famous gaffe by saying inadvertently on microphone that his solution to HIV would be to “shoot the queers.” Once again the GLBT community of Houston spoke out. T-shirt were made with the caption' "Don't shoot me Louy!"