National Park Service closes D.C.'s historic Dupont Circle Park during WorldPride
The National Park Service and U.S. Park Police on Thursday evening closed Dupont Circle Park, widely known as the heart of Washington,'s LGBTQ neighborhood, ahead of the final weekend of WorldPride, an international Pride celebration being held in the nation's capital this year.
This year's parade route was not set to go through Dupont Circle, but the park has traditionally hosted unofficial celebrations after Pride events. It was home to some of D.C.'s earliest Pride celebrations in the 1970s as well as major protests during both the LGBTQ rights and Civil Rights Movements.
The park service said in a letter Wednesday that the park would be closed from 6 p.m. Thursday until 6 p.m. Sunday. The letter said the U.S. Park Police had determined that the closure is necessary to 'secure the park, deter potential violence, reduce the risk of destructive acts and decrease the need for extensive law enforcement presences.'
Capital Pride Alliance, which organizes D.C. Pride and is hosting this year's WorldPride celebration, said Friday that it is 'frustrated and disappointed' in the park service's decision to close Dupont Circle during WorldPride.
'This beloved landmark is central to the community that WorldPride intends to celebrate and honor,' Capital Pride Alliance said in a statement. 'It's much more than a park, for generations it's been a gathering place for DC's LGBTQ+ community, hosting first amendment assemblies and memorial services for those we lost to the AIDS epidemic and following tragic events like the Pulse nightclub shooting.'
The organization added that the 'sudden move' was 'made overnight without consultation with the Capital Pride Alliance or other local officials,' and that no WorldPride activities were planned in Dupont Circle and thus no official events would be affected.
The park's closure comes after weeks of back and forth between D.C. police and federal officials. D.C. Police Chief Pamela Smith requested a full closure of the park in April, and on Tuesday morning, the National Parks Service issued a statement that the park would be closed through the final weekend of WorldPride festivities due to the request from Smith and U.S. Park Police, NBC Washington reported.
That same day, Smith rescinded the request after meeting with members of the community to talk about the significance of the park to the Pride celebration, according to NBC Washington, and Smith told two D.C. City Council members that the park would remain open for the weekend.
Then, in a letter Wednesday, Major Frank Hilsher of the U.S. Park Police requested that 'anti-scale' fencing, which is designed to prevent people from climbing over it, be used to close the park.
Hilsher's letter, which was included with the park service's letter, detailed a number of incidents that occurred in the park after formal Pride events over the years, including vandalism in 2023 that resulted in $175,000 in damage to the park's historic fountain.
He added that open-source intelligence reporting has 'identified a local DJ advertising and selling tickets to an unpermitted gathering/party in Dupont Circle following World Pride events.' The event, Hilsher said, is not sanctioned by WorldPride and has not applied for a separate permit that would allow the park service to manage the event.
'This social media advertisement is stating that this is the same DJ and 'party' as the previous several years, which have resulted in the unsafe conditions and damages recounted above,' Hilsher said in the letter.
Organizers of WorldPride estimated that as many as 3 million people could attend, though they also issued a warning to potential transgender attendees from outside of the U.S. to come at their own risk and consider travel advisories from some European countries.
In just the first few weeks of his second administration, President Donald Trump issued several executive orders targeting trans people, including declaring that there are only two unchangeable sexes; prohibiting trans people from enlisting and serving in the military; barring trans girls and women from competing on female sports teams in federally-funded K-12 schools and colleges; and barring federal funding from going to hospitals that provide transition-related care to minors.
As a result of Trump's executive order defining sex, federal officials have also scrubbed agency websites of any mention of transgender or intersex people. References to transgender and queer people were removed from the webpage for the Stonewall National Monument commemorating the site of the 1969 Stonewall Uprising, widely considered a turning point in the modern gay rights movement. A web page dedicated to Frank Kameny, an LGBTQ rights pioneer, was also erased from the National Park Service website this year. The National Park Service's webpage for Dupont Circle Park also now says that the park 'has served as the anchor of a neighborhood of diplomats, government officials, war commemorations, and the LGB community for over 200 years,' removing transgender and queer from the LGBTQ acronym.
Earlier this week, the Navy confirmed to NBC News that it would rename the USNS Harvey Milk, a fleet replenishment oiler named for the LGBTQ rights activist, Navy veteran and first openly gay man elected to public office in California.
This article was originally published on NBCNews.com
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Washington Post
27 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Bucharest gay pride march turns 20 as LGBTQ+ Romanians face growing hostility from right-wing groups
BUCHAREST, Romania — Thousands of LGBTQ+ supporters took to the streets of Romania's capital Saturday for its annual gay pride parade, following a tense election cycle marked by an increase in hate speech against the community. Marchers of all ages walked through Bucharest's streets and down the central Victory Avenue, as many waved colorful flags, blew whistles and held placards that read: 'Be proud, be bold, be you!' Held since 2005, the event marked Bucharest Pride's 20th anniversary.


Forbes
an hour ago
- Forbes
Inside A Joyful D.C. WorldPride Music Fest With Jennifer Lopez, Paris Hilton, Zedd, More
Jennifer Lopez performs during the LuisaViaRoma for Unicef event at La Certosa di San Giacomo Eyes and ears around the globe may have been trained on the evolving and very public cat fight between President Donald Trump and Elon Musk. But at the Festival Grounds at RFK Campus, home to the WorldPride Music Fest just four miles from the White House, there was nothing but love, joy and dancing during Day 1 of the fest, with scant references from the stage to the feud or the administration that's been trouncing on LGBTQ+ rights with a slew of executive orders. The focus, instead, was on celebration. 'We are singing and dancing right here on their front lawn, misbehaving. Yes we are,' said liner Jennifer Lopez, who expressed her allyship and gratitude to the community. 'Over the years your love and your support have been a source of strength for me and today I am here to celebrate you,' she said. 'I'm so happy to be able to be here to celebrate community, diversity, love and freedom.' Besides Lopez, Marina, Paris Hilton, Rita Ora, Galantis, LP Giobbi, Tinashe, Betty Who and Zedd—who DJ'd a preparty at Utopia DC the night before—were among Day 1 performers. Day 2 features headliners Troye Sivan and Rene Rapp, Kim Petras, Raye, Sofi Tukker, Purple Disco Machine, RuPaul and more. Here are some highlights from the first day:
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Inside KELOLAND: Task force members highlight $600 million prison cap
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (KELO) — After meeting for more than eight hours in Pierre this past week, members of South Dakota's Project Prison Reset task force have narrowed the focus of where a new men's prison should be built and how big it should be. Huron company added to prison discussion On Tuesday, task force members unanimously supported building a facility, or multiple, at existing Department of Corrections spots or at proposed sites in the Worthing or Mitchell areas. The state has previously spent more than $50 million in land purchase and design costs for a new men's prison in rural Lincoln County at a site that has now been officially rejected by the task force. The goal is to build new prison facilities to house 1,500 to 1,700 inmates with a maximum cost of $600 million. JE Dunn Construction has been tasked with bringing proposals in front of the task force at its July meeting. On this week's Inside KELOLAND, Republican Sen. Chris Karr and Democratic Sen. Jamie Smith shared what they took away from the task force's latest decisions. Karr said state lawmakers have challenged contractors and the state engineer to provide options that meet the 1,500 beds and no more than $600 million price tag. 'I look forward to hearing back at our next meeting about what they come up for us for options,' Karr said. Karr said the previous price tag for a men's prison in Lincoln County at the cost of $825 million was too high to get the necessary two-thirds majority vote in the House and Senate to be approved. 'We need to do something,' Karr said, who added the Department of Corrections' design choices of a campus style prison that is built to last 100 years dicated some of the higher costs. Smith said the longer the state continues to delay taking action, the more expensive future prison needs will become. 'If we only spend the $600 million, we've got to make sure that this is the right thing to build,' Smith said. 'If we build under way too much, we're going to be having this conversation right away again.' Smith said he believes the Department of Corrections needs more space and staff to help incorporate more rehabilitation, treatment options and vocation with inmates. 'Then it's the re-entry too,' Smith said. 'We need to get all those put together to be able to help people be successful in the future.' Karr said in 2024, 63% of the men released from a state prison served less than one year. Karr said DOC is having more success with rehabilitation in Springfield and not Sioux Falls because of a lack of space. 'We're too overcrowded in Sioux Falls,' Karr said. Smith said lawmakers should consider what policies and investments the state could make to keep people out of prison. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.