How a few courageous students led a Tacoma Pride movement on campus that spread across the city
Late into the night of July 11, 1997, Jenn (DeLury) Ciplet 鈥98 and a group of friends were dipping Styrofoam cups into bright colors of paint. They were members of the student club United Methodists (UMeth), and they had a mission.
The following day, the group brought the cups to the fence surrounding the track outside Memorial Fieldhouse on the 兔子先生 campus, and stuck them through the chain link in a large arc: first red, then orange, yellow, green, blue, purple. The Styrofoam rainbow signaled the location of the Tacoma Pride Festival, the first to be held in the city in 12 years.
鈥淚t gave great visibility to it,鈥 Jenn says of the rainbow. 鈥淧eople could see exactly where they were going.鈥
Hosting a celebration of LGBTQ identity was a bold move for the college in the 鈥90s, and it took a monumental effort by several committed students. Steve Gillis-Moore 鈥97 was one of the instigators. A week before the event, he鈥檇 sent out an invitation via email to a large group of allies. 鈥淧lan to attend the historic rebirth of Gay Pride in the Tacoma/Pierce County area,鈥 he wrote. 鈥淭here is a large community of gay folks in Tacoma, and this event will provide the visibility our growing community needs.鈥
Visibility, in terms of being out and proud, was something that Steve had thought a lot about during his time at Puget Sound. As a first-year student, he started attending the now-defunct 鈥淎s Is鈥 Coming Out Support Group, which gave him confidence and community. 鈥淚 was very slow to come out,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t took me two solid years to finally not beat around the bush about it.鈥
Steve also joined the student club for LGBTQ students and allies, then called Understanding Sexuality (US), and got involved in the Greater Tacoma LGBTQ community. He volunteered for the Pierce County AIDS Foundation (PCAF), which held an AIDS walk every year. That鈥檚 where he met James Spencer, then a recent graduate of The Evergreen State College who worked at PCAF, and the two friends started talking about organizing a Pride festival in Tacoma.