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Gay Groups March At Last In Boston St. Patrick's Day Parade

Members of OutVets, a group of gay military veterans, hold a banner and flags as they march in the St. Patrick's Day parade, Sunday in Boston's South Boston neighborhood. (Steven Senne/AP)
Members of OutVets, a group of gay military veterans, hold a banner and flags as they march in the St. Patrick's Day parade, Sunday in Boston's South Boston neighborhood. (Steven Senne/AP)

Boston's St. Patrick's Day parade made history Sunday as two gay and lesbian groups marched after decades of opposition that went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court.

The gay military veterans service group OutVets and gay rights group Boston Pride joined the annual celebration of military veterans and Irish heritage at the invitation of the sponsoring South Boston Allied War Veterans Council.

"We march today for the memories of those thousands and thousands of people who went before us, some who went to their graves in the closet," OutVets founder and leader and Air Force veteran Bryan Bishop told his group before the parade. He called it "the beginning of the mission of this organization to honor the service and sacrifice of every single LGBT veteran, their family, their allies and every veteran in this country who fought so selflessly to defend the rights that we hold dear."

Sarah Jo Gomez-Lorraine, a Naval officer and OutVets member taking part in the march, said it's an honor to represent gay veterans who never got the opportunity to come out.

"I feel today that I stand on the shoulders of giants who've gone before me and never got to see this in their lives," she said. "It's very humbling to be able to stand in places that others never got to."

Boston Pride member Freddy Murphy said the open inclusion of gay groups was a long time coming.

"I just remember watching the parade and kind of thinking it was hopeless, that my entire world was against me," said Murphy, a Dorchester neighborhood native whose father was a Boston firefighter. "This is why I'm matching today."

Freddy Murphy, of Boston, front left, waves an Irish flag while marching with the LGBT community advocacy group Boston Pride during the St. Patrick's Day parade. (Steven Senne/AP)
Freddy Murphy, of Boston, front left, waves an Irish flag while marching with the LGBT community advocacy group Boston Pride during the St. Patrick's Day parade. (Steven Senne/AP)

The Allied War Council's current leaders voted 5-4 in December to welcome OutVets as one of about 100 groups in this year's parade. Boston Pride said it also received an acceptance letter this week.

"We honor immigrants and veterans, and they served," council leader Brian Mahoney said this week.

Boston's mayors had boycotted the event since 1995, when the council took its fight to exclude gay groups to the U.S. Supreme Court and won on First Amendment grounds.

This year Mayor Marty Walsh, Gov. Charlie Baker and other Massachusetts political leaders took part.

First-term U.S. Rep. Seth Moulton, who served four tours in Iraq as a Marine, marched with OutVets. "I believe gay rights is the civil rights fight of our generation and this is a small, but important, step in the steady march toward freedom and justice," he said.

At a St. Patrick's Day breakfast earlier Sunday, Walsh thanked the sponsors for making sure the parade, was "fully inclusive today." He and Baker said in parade-side interviews with New England Cable News they were glad to see the issue put to rest. "Gay people marched in the parade for years, just under different banners," Walsh said.

In addition to St. Patrick's Day, the parade also celebrates Monday's local Evacuation Day holiday, honoring a Revolutionary War victory in Boston.

Some Roman Catholic groups declined to march, including the state Knights of Columbus, saying they felt this year's parade had been politicized.

This article was originally published on March 15, 2015.

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