ABOUT
Many Voices.
One Community.
Buffalo Pride is a joyful celebration of Buffalo and Western New York’s LGBTQIA2S+ history and culture. Throughout the month of June and beyond, our community, friends and chosen families come together to love and uplift each other in the spirit of Pride.

Many Voices.
One Community.
Buffalo Pride is a joyful celebration of Buffalo and Western New York’s LGBTQIA2S+ history and culture. Throughout the month of June and beyond, our community, friends and chosen families come together to love and uplift each other and ourselves in the spirit of Pride.

OUR MISSION
Buffalo Pride strives to uplift the LGBTQIA2S+ community through the Buffalo Pride Parade and the Buffalo Pride Community Calendar, which spotlights diverse events throughout Pride Month that bring people together in the spirit of celebration, advocacy and unity.
We offer the Community Calendar to the community as a space to share the many Pride events and celebrations hosted by community groups across Western New York. It is our hope that the Community Calendar will encourage more, and increasingly diverse, organizations, groups and businesses from around the region to contribute events and activities that support our LGBTQIA2S+ community.
HISTORY
1970’s
In June 1970, one year after the Stonewall riots, thousands of demonstrators marched up Sixth Avenue in New York from the former Stonewall Inn on Christopher Street to Central Park where a “gay-in” was held. It was called the Christopher Street Liberation Day and it was the beginning of Gay Pride celebrations as we know them.
Now, each year in June, Pride festivities across the country serve to commemorate the birth of the modern gay, lesbian and transgender civil rights movement, as well as affirm our lives in the context of the larger community.
In conservative, steel-town Buffalo, a closeted gay community acknowledged Pride privately and unofficially. Participants describe a gay community largely divided along gender lines, with separate dances and picnics for men and women. The men held their dances on Fridays, while the Sisters of Sappho danced on Saturdays.
1980’s
By the mid-1980s, Gay Pride activities in Buffalo were more focused and centralized. In 1988, the Buffalo Gay & Lesbian Community Network was founded by Carol Speser and Larry Peck. The Network sponsored the Lesbian and Gay Pride Unity Fest (LAGPUF) for the next four years. The 1988 Pride Unity Fest, organized under the theme “Power through Unity with Diversity,” included a day of workshops, a Miss Buffalo Boat ride sponsored by Gay and Lesbian Youth of Buffalo (GLYB), a concert by the City of Good Neighbors Chorale, the DYKETONES at the Tralfamadore Café and a talk by transgender activist Leslie Fienberg for Workers World and The Other Sex, a gay and lesbian film festival sponsored by HALLWALLS.
Other events from the ’80s, which became hallmarks of local Gay Pride celebrations, included the annual AIDS Memorial Candlelight Service hosted by the Interfaith AIDS Network, the Hall of Shame Awards (1990 nominees included “Hizzoner Jimmy Griffin” and school board member James Comerford), the annual womyn’s dances sponsored by GROW and SHADES, the Frontrunners annual Gay Pride Run, the Queen City Softball Day at Front Park and the famous Gearing Up for Summer Party at Ellicott Creek Park.
1990’s
The first Candlelight Wish Celebration, held behind the Buffalo & Erie County Historical Society, was the centerpiece of the 1991 Lesbian and Gay Pride Unity Fest. This was the first major Pride event in Buffalo to be held outdoors in a public place. This unique event, with its secluded outdoor setting and non-denominational spiritual element, offered a graceful transition between private and public celebrations of Gay Pride. Highlights of the evening included appearances by Common Council President George K. Arthur and Lance Ringel, first director of the NYS Office of Lesbian and Gay Concerns. The second annual Candlelight Wish Celebration featured a message from then-Governor Mario Cuomo, a moving address by (straight) Buffalo News columnist Donn Esmond and a male drag chorus line made up of performers from rival bars. Another high spot of the 1992 Pride lineup was a performance by Lea Delia, again at the Tralf.
In 1993, at least 500 Buffalonians traveled to Washington for the April March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Equal Rights and Liberation, one of the largest civil rights demonstrations in history. The activist spirit brought home by local organizers from this extraordinary event resulted in Buffalo’s first ever Gay Pride Parade. The parade and other Gay Pride activities were produced that year by the Pride/Western New York Committee of the Community Network.
In 1998, fearing the effects of a loss of continuity, an ad-hoc committee of dedicated persons came together to coordinate the Pride Parade and celebration. From this group, Pride Buffalo, Inc., an independent community group, was born. The group incorporated as a not-for-profit 501(C)(3) organization in order to lay a permanent foundation for future Pride celebrations and to ensure a smooth succession of leadership.
2010’s
In 2010 Pride Buffalo, Inc. allowed the event to be absorbed into the annual programming of another LGBT focused not-for-profit, the Pride Center of Western New York. This move ensured the stability and continuity of Buffalo’s annual Pride festival. The Pride Center board of directors made the decision to relocate the festival to the emerging downtown waterfront at Canalside in 2011. The location change proved to be successful as attendance grew from 2,500 to a staggering 15,000. The Allen Street Festival was also added to Pride weekend in 2010, giving Buffalonians the opportunity to dance in the streets of their historic gayborhood. The Dyke March & Allen Street Festival planning committee helped reinvigorate both events with additional volunteer activism.
With continually growing crowds and supporters, the Pride Center of Western New York expanded the Pride festival once again in 2013 to encompass an entire week of events. The week of celebration included a Flag Raising Ceremony, Gay 5K, Chroma (an art opening hosted in memory of longtime LGBT supporter Jim Rolls), the Dyke March, Allen Street Festival, Pride Parade, Pride Festival at Canalside and a beach day event.
In the 2010’s, Evergreen Health, a community health center that specializes in the health and wellness of LGBTQ+ people, became the presenting sponsor and organizer of the Buffalo Pride Parade and the Pride Festival at Canalside as a way to give back to the community they serve. Donations and profits from both events continued to offset costs to host the events, while also supporting programs for the LGBTQ+ community at Evergreen’s affiliate, the Pride Center of Western New York.
2020’s
Throughout the early 2020’s, community-led events like the Intersect Pride Arts Festival, Upstate New York Black and Latino Pride’s Mini Ball and Pride Street Fest, and more grew to become significant Buffalo Pride events alongside the Buffalo Pride Parade and the Festival at Canalside.
In 2025, Buffalo Pride organizers including Evergreen Health began to support the next generation of planning for a community Pride festival, supporting partners from across Western New York as they reimagine our region’s Pride festival event.
Buffalo Pride will continue to organize the Pride Parade, with all profits offsetting costs, while also benefiting the essential healthcare programs and services that Evergreen Health and its affiliates provide to Western New York’s LGBTQ+ community.
See the full list of events throughout Pride month and beyond on the Buffalo Pride Community Calendar.
IT TAKES A COMMUNITY
Buffalo Pride wouldn’t be possible without the generous support of local businesses and organizations. All profits of the Buffalo Pride Parade support the essential healthcare programs and services that Evergreen Health and its affiliates provide to Western New York’s LGBTQIA2S+ community. Thank you to our sponsors, big and small.

