First gay pride parade morristown tn

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“We worked hard on getting our allies on board. “We might just get five people, we had no idea,” Moore says. The organizers had no idea how many people would march.

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The decision, and the application for a street banner, prompted many articles and letters to the editor in the Nelson Daily News, some in favour of the parade, most against.Īt left: Christopher Moore, photo by Bill Metcalfe But they decided, after much difficult discussion, to go ahead. Moore says there was an approximately 50-50 split on whether to have the parade or not. “The discussion was about safety, about people who were there afraid of losing their jobs - teachers, people who worked at the college, jobs where people were afraid of being outed.” In fact, there was a lot of disagreement about whether to have a parade at all.Ĭhristopher Moore, one of the organizers of that parade and the one coming up on Sunday at 3 p.m., says there was a lot of fear. In 1996, about 50 gay and lesbian people met at the Women’s Centre to talk about whether to have Nelson’s first pride parade.

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