We Are Trinity Proud!

About Us

Trinity Pride Coalition is a group of LGBTQA+ members and Allies living, working, and celebrating life in California's beautiful Trinity County. We mainly serve as a social group of open-minded and supportive people, but also advocate on behalf of our community and other marginalized groups, as well as provide resources to individuals in our county. Our goal is to create a safe, educated, and supportive environment in Trinity County for people of all orientations and identities to thrive, and to advance the cause of intersectional social justice for the betterment of all people here.

Trinity's History of Pride

Across the United States, Rural Areas are often the least accepting and most hostile to individual differences. In these small, tight-knit communities, people have less exposure to diversity and just a few influential community leaders can spread bigoted perceptions with outsized influence. Trinity County is no exception, and the climate toward LGBTQIA+ members has traditionally been misinformed and hostile, with a few "bad apples" dominating the community dialogue with hatred and stereotypes.

As the National Conversation about LGBTQIA+ rights becomes increasingly fraught, Rural communities feel an outsized impact of the hatred and misinformation being spread by bad actors with an amplified reach. Within the past 5 years, the latest spate of conspiracy theories and misinformation have taken root here and contributed to the discrimination people face. An outsized impact is felt by our LGBTQIA+ youth, with increasing rates of teen depression and anxiety. After several teen suicides, Advocates and Allies decided something had to be done, and Trinity Pride Coalition was created with the goal of changing things for the better.

We are lucky in that for as many bad actors we have in our community, there are many positive leaders who have been stepping up to make a difference. Ministers at the Trinity Congregational Church have been voices of support and reason even before the foundation of TPC, and many community businesses have been supportive of our cause. In 2022 the Trinity Pride Coalition was formed to provide a greater level of visibility, and to connect all of our supporters together to mitigate the negative messaging and discrimination. What started as a small interest group has quickly grown and proven that for as many bad apples might be growing in the orchard, there are many many more people with their hearts in the right places who want to uplift our community.

Our small inaugural pride picnic in 2021 has now grown to a large community wide celebration of intersectional diversity, and we hope to continue expanding into educational events and community resources alongside our social calendar.

Want to know more? We welcome you to explore our site to learn about the current events and initiatives we are working on!

History of the Movement

While advocacy for LGBTQIA+ individuals has existed at many times in many cultures, the emergence of a national movement in the United States began in 1970's after the Stonewall Uprising in New York City. 20th century US political discourse was defined by many movements looking to fulfil the promise of liberty and justice upon which our county was founded. From Women's Suffrage in the early 1900's, to the Civil Rights movements in the 1950's and 1960's, these national struggles for equal rights could trace their roots back even further, to the Labor Rights Movement, Emancipation, and the American Revolution itself. The fight for recognition and equality is an American tradition and important part of our democratic heritage.

This isn't to say it has always been easy. In the 1970's, LGBTQIA+ individuals faced a widespread legal and systemic oppression. Sodomy laws across the United States criminalized relationships between same sex individuals, and those arrested were often beaten or killed in police custody. Medical and Psychiatric organizations classified same-sex attraction as a disorder and widespread treatments included institutionalization and chemical or surgical interventions. Intersex individuals were routinely non-medically altered at birth without the consent of their parents, and transgender and gender non-conforming individuals were subject to many of the same legal oppression as those with same sex relationships. Embracing a LGBQTIA+ identity at the time quite literally meant risking death, and often being pushed to the margins of mainstream society.

This all came to a head at the Stonewall Nightclub in New York during the summer of 1969, where a violent police raiding party looking to harm and oppress bar patrons was met with resistance. After police started beating the bar patrons under arrest, the gathered crowd instead of dispersing, resisted, kicking off 5 days of uprising in the Greenwich neighborhood. The following year, community organizers held the Christopher Street Gay Liberation Day Parade, to celebrate being alive and proud of their identity, and to rally for human rights. At a time when just existing without hiding was an act of defiance, these parades were a call to society to reckon with treatment of people they would prefer to ignore the existence of.

These early events, including the Christopher Street Gay Liberation Parade, laid the foundation for other groups, including the national Pride celebrations that now take place around the world. Organizers and allies alike continued to rally in their communities to stop the violence against LGBTQIA+ individuals and worked tirelessly to shift both public opinion and the legal landscape toward justice and equal rights.

Over the 5 decades since the uprising, same sex relationships have been decriminalized and are no longer listed as a disorder by all major US health organizations. LGBTQIA+ citizens have more federal protections, including rights to housing, equal consideration for civil service jobs, marriage in all 50 states, and non-discrimination in schools under the Title IX laws. However, for just as many preciously won protections, there have been many setbacks along the way. "Don't Ask, Don't Tell," legislation during the 90's ushered in two decades of fear and discrimination in the US Armed Services. The AIDs epidemic during the 80's was intentionally allowed to ravage the gay community by the Reagan Administration. More recently, under Trump, federal protections against discrimination for LGBTQIA+ were rolled back by executive action, and conservative Supreme Court Justices have expressed a desire to reverse Marriage Equality in future court sessions. In addition, though much of the legal discrimination has been eliminated or overturned, LGBTQIA+ citizens are still subject to defacto discrimination in their local communities, and many cannot afford representation when they are unfairly targeted.

Pride and other service organizations are a vital part of the ongoing everday struggle for acceptance, love, and equal rights across the United States. The goals of the movement are not to set community members apart, or create special privilege, but rather to ensure that LGBTQIA+ people have a safe and welcoming place in our everyday public life, and equal protection under the law. It is together, with allies and other marginalized groups, that we build a rainbow bridge to a better, more just future. In the vision of National Pride, as well as Trinity Pride, all our lives are enriched, and our world is a better place for all of us when we accomplish it!