
A rainbow of balloons on Cookman Avenue. Mary Walton photo.
For the 21st year in a row, Asbury Park hosted the gay pride parade on Sunday. Although it featured groups from Monmouth and Ocean Counties, this parade and festival has grown into a statewide happening, with several corporate entries (Wells Fargo brought in a horse-drawn stagecoach) and a fair share of marching politicians. Mostly, though, in its flamboyance, it looks like something you might see in New Orleans.
Like most pride parades in the United States, the one in New Jersey is always held in June, in remembrance of the “Stonewall riots,” a series of Greenwich Village demonstrations, some of them violent, that erupted in June of 1969 in reaction to a police raid on a gay bar. Those demonstrations are considered a pivotal moment in the movement against gay persecution.
The only thing riotous at Sunday’s parade was the array of colors.
— Charles Layton

Unshirted enthusiasm. Mary Walton photo

Among many Grovers in attendance, Joan Caputo and Diane Davis. Mary Walton photo

Festival crowd. By Tracey James, Blogfinger photographer

Photo by Tracey James, Blogfinger staff

Diners at the sidewalk restaurants along Cookman had ringside seats for the parade. Photo by Mary Walton
The Halloween Parade evolved into its present state; it no longer involves the whole neighborhood as it once had. Ergo, the “aka” statement in my post.
Clarification- The gay pride parade and the Halloween parade are two totally different events. They gay pride parade always takes place in June. And the Halloween parade always takes place on Halloween. The gay pride parade is about gay pride. The Halloween parade speaks for itself.
Living and working at St. Vincent’s in NYC for many years, I got to see quite a few gay pride parades, aka “Halloween Parade.” Seems this one was tame by comparison, and that’s a good thing. The one in the Village got more and more obscene as the years went by. Cringe worthy.
Many years ago the wife and I took advantage of the original People’s Airlines offer of $88 round trip to San Francisco (Oakland but that is a whole other story) and while there saw the famous SF Gay Pride parade. A highlight was the all dressed in black “Dykes on Bikes” It was a sensation even in San Francisco.