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Nottinghamshire Pride

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
LGBT pride charity and festival in Nottingham

Nottinghamshire Pride
Nottinghamshire Pride in 2025
FrequencyAnnually
LocationsNottingham, England
Founded1997; 28 years ago (1997)
Most recent26 July 2025
Next event25 July 2026
Websitenottspride.co.uk

Nottinghamshire Pride, also known asNotts Pride,[1] is a registeredcharity inNottingham,Nottinghamshire, England.[2] It organises an annualLGBTQpride festival of the same name in the city of Nottingham, usually in July.

History

[edit]

The first pride festival in Nottingham was held on Broad Street,[3] in theHockley area of the city, in 1997.[1] It initially went by the namePink Lace, a name it retained in 1998 and 1999, when Pink Lace was held atNottingham Castle.[3]

2000s

[edit]

In the year 2000, the festival took the nameNottingham Pride and was held on theVictoria Embankment[3][4] alongside theRiver Trent.[4]

Two pride festivals, Nottingham Pride and Pink Lace, were planned in Nottingham in 2001, but neither were successful. No pride festival was laid on in Nottingham in 2002.[4]

Nottingham Pride returned in 2003 at theArboretum,[3][4] where each subsequent Nottingham Pride festival took place until 2010,[3] by which time the number of attendants had increased to a point where the park was no longer a suitable venue.[3][5]

2010s

[edit]
The crowds at the 2010 event

Nottingham Pride 2010 took place at theForest Recreation Ground[3][5] on 31 July. It was officially opened by theLord Mayor of Nottingham, Brian Grocock, and the event was headlined bythe Cheeky Girls, with other acts including Kenelis,Lisa Scott-Lee, andBetty.[citation needed]

2,000 people attended the pride march fromOld Market Square to theForest Recreation Ground in 2012, framed as a celebration of the progress of gay rights. This preceded two days of speeches, music and entertainment, which at the time was expected to bring 30,000 people.[6]

Nottinghamshire Pride celebrated its 10th anniversary in 2013, welcoming 14,000 attendees. In October that year, lost sponsors and a resultant lack of funds for the charity, which had fallen into £17,000 of debt, led to its volunteers voting to close it. At the time its events were costing £30,000 per year to run, with a suggested donation of £1 per attendee. At the 2013 event, only a third of the attendees donated money. Chairman Ben Holmes said it had been in financial trouble for the last three years, and that it had attempted to scale down the event to save money.[7]

From 2014, Nottinghamshire Pride returned to the Hockley area; its events would remain there until 2023.[8]

Students atNottingham Academy, Greenwood Campus supported Nottinghamshire Pride in 2018

In 2018, Pride was held on Saturday, 28 July in the city centre of Nottingham. The parade included many live events by various individuals, stalls, art and music, along with a pride parade that took place at 11 am. The parade began at Lister Gate and finished at Broad Street.[9]

In 2019 Nottinghamshire Pride was held on Saturday 27 July inNottingham city centre.[10] A series ofrainbow crossings were painted in Carlton Street and Broad Street, Hockley, that year.[8]

2020s

[edit]

TheCOVID-19 lockdown prevented the 2020 event from taking place. The 2021 event, held in September,[11] returned in a scaled back form and drew 9,000 people.[12]

Nottinghamshire Pride returned at full scale in 2022,[11] on 30 July. 15,000 people attended, exceeding the organisers' expectations.[12] Its theme was "We See You". The march began at Lister Gate, then moved to Albert Street,Beastmarket Hill,Long Row,Pelham Street, George Street, and finally Broad Street. It included aNottinghamshire Fire and Rescue Service engine, carnival marching bands andsamba dancers. On Heathcoat Street,[11] performers included YouTube comedy starCharity Shop Sue, who performed a DJ set.[12]

Over 10,000 people gathered for the 2023 event,[8] at which the band Girlband! performed.[1]Howard Donald of the band Take That was scheduled to perform at Binks Yard for the event, though was dropped from Nottinghamshire Pride after liking social media posts that werederogatory towards the LGBTQ community. He said he was "deeply sorry" for the incident.[13] 2023's event was its tenth year in that format.[14]

In 2024, the rainbow crossings at Carlton Street and Broad Street, Hockley were repainted ahead of the event, adding the colours black and brown to representpeople of colour as well as blue, pink and white to represent thetransgender community.[15]Tram 213 in Nottingham was also painted in rainbow colours, and nicknamed a "trambow", by train firmAlstom.[16] Bishop of Nottingham,Patrick McKinney, stated in June that it was "not appropriate for our Catholic schools to celebrate Pride as we cannot endorse its entire agenda." This was criticised by the charity Notts LGBT+ Network, which said it was "disappointed" with the "regressive" advice.[17] The march had a new route, beginning at Lister Gate at 11 am, travelling along Victoria Street, High Cross Street and Goose Gate, and ending atSneinton Market. The relocation to Sneinton allowed more people to attend. It had the theme of "the power of love".[8]

Notts Pride 2025, also based in Sneinton and with a similar march route to 2024's event, benefitted from the addition of a new acoustic stage hosted by the Grove, a new independent music venue in the city. Acts included the return of Girlband!, and a speech by Laquarn Lewis from the seriesWhat It Feels Like for a Girl, based on the memoirs of Hucknall-bornParis Lees.[1]

Reference

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toNottinghamshire Pride.
  1. ^abcdPatel, Asha (24 June 2025)."Notts Pride returns to city with 'eclectic' line-up".BBC News. Retrieved4 October 2025.
  2. ^"NOTTINGHAMSHIRE PRIDE - Charity 1165056".Charity Commission for England and Wales. Retrieved4 October 2025.
  3. ^abcdefgEdgley, David (18 October 2011)."From 1997 onwards".Our Nottinghamshire. Archived fromthe original on 16 January 2024. Retrieved27 September 2019.
  4. ^abcd"Nottingham's Pride Festivals – 1".www.nottsrh.webeden.co.uk. Nottinghamshire's Rainbow Heritage. 2011. Archived fromthe original on 27 September 2019. Retrieved27 September 2019.
  5. ^ab"Nottingham's Pride Festivals – 2".www.nottsrh.webeden.co.uk. Nottinghamshire's Rainbow Heritage. 2011. Archived fromthe original on 27 September 2019. Retrieved27 September 2019.
  6. ^"Nottinghamshire Gay Pride event takes place".BBC News. 28 July 2012. Retrieved4 October 2025.
  7. ^"Nottingham Pride charity is wound down after cash woes".BBC News. 25 October 2013. Retrieved4 October 2025.
  8. ^abcdKataria, Sonia; Wheeldon, Sophie (27 July 2024)."Nottingham: Thousands 'celebrate diversity' at annual Pride event".BBC News. Retrieved4 October 2025.
  9. ^"It's in Nottingham: Pride".www.visit-nottinghamshire.co.uk. 2018. Archived fromthe original on 8 August 2018.
  10. ^Gorman, Rachel (16 May 2019)."Date, times and parade route confirmed for Nottingham Pride 2019".NottinghamshireLive. Retrieved5 April 2021.
  11. ^abcHarby, Jennifer (30 July 2022)."Nottinghamshire Pride returns as full-scale event following Covid".BBC News. Retrieved4 October 2025.
  12. ^abcHarby, Jennifer (14 August 2022)."Nottinghamshire Pride event attended by thousands".BBC News. Retrieved4 October 2025.
  13. ^"Take That's Howard Donald dropped from Pride event for liking anti-LGBTQ+ tweets".The Guardian. 17 June 2023.ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved5 October 2025.
  14. ^"Nottingham Pride event attended by thousands of revellers".BBC News. 29 July 2023. Retrieved4 October 2025.
  15. ^Locker, Joe; Hare, Simon (16 July 2024)."Hockley rainbow road to be repainted before Notts Pride".BBC News. Retrieved4 October 2025.
  16. ^Barnes, Liam (12 July 2024)."Rainbow makeover for tram ahead of Notts Pride festival".BBC News. Retrieved4 October 2025.
  17. ^Dickson, Rebecca (8 June 2024)."Bishop criticised over Pride advice to Nottingham schools".BBC News. Retrieved4 October 2025.
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