Poster for Stonewall 50 project. Photograph of the 1977 Pride March in Boston by Don C. Hanover III, Gay Community News Photograph Collection. Poster design by Jim Gibson.

Boston & Stonewall 50

Remembering, celebrating, and honoring our past

Start exploring Boston's LGBTQ historical places...

The History Project has joined forces with Boston Pride to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall Uprising in New York City, an action that helped launch the modern LGBTQ rights movement. In June, 2019, banners and posters will spring up around Boston and Cambridge on buildings where LGBTQ history was made, with each banner including link to this interactive map that describes each location's connection to Boston's LGBTQ history.

We are grateful to Boston Pride, the mayor's offices of Boston and Cambridge, and to the building owners and managers who have supported this effort to celebrate our history.

A note about this project: The locations described in the Stonewall50 project's online map were identified and selected through an open community survey, and only those locations selected through this survey are included at this time. In addition, despite our best efforts, we were unable to secure permission to hang banners or posters from all of the selected locations. We know there's much more to Boston's LGBTQ history, to our complex, evolving story as a community. We want to know: What historical sites, buildings, events, individuals, and stories are important to you? Contact us with your suggestions and questions, and in the coming months The History Project will work to incorporate your ideas, feedback, critiques, and suggestions into this project.

Project Partners

The History Project: Documenting LGBTQ Boston

Boston Pride

Club Café

Marc C. McGovern, Mayor of Cambridge | City of Cambridge

Martin J. Walsh, Mayor of Boston | City of Boston

The History Project is supported in part by the Massachusetts Cultural Council.

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