List of 2017 Women's March locations
This article may contain excessive or inappropriate references to self-published sources. (December 2022) |
The 2017 Women's March was a network of global political rallies that took place in cities around the world on January 21, 2017. These "sister marches" were both formally and organically related to the popularized 2017 Women's March, all of which happened in concert. The date of this global protest is particularly significant because it was the first day of President Donald J. Trump's term. In addition, the protest was largely in response the positions of the new presidency and the results of the 2016 presidential election. The march was also about promoting women's rights. Other noted causes included, but were not limited to: immigration reform, climate science, and health care reform, countering religious discrimination, violence against women, LGBTQ abuse, addressing racial inequities (e.g. Black Lives Matter), workers' issues, and environmental issues.[1]
United States
[edit]Listed below are 588 marches in the U.S. in support of the 2017 Women's March.
State | Cities | Photo | Approximate attendance | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
470,000[2] – 1,000,000[3] | The March began at Independence Avenue at the southwest corner of the Capitol building, and continued along the National Mall. Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe announced that he would attend the Washington march instead of Trump's inaugural parade. McAuliffe said he would be marching with his wife Dorothy, Lt. Gov. Ralph Northam and Cecile Richards, president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America.[4] Mayor Muriel Bowser spoke before the crowds. The 2017 Women's March on Washington was likely the largest single-day demonstration in recorded U.S. history.[5] There were no arrests.[6][7] | |||
Alabama | Birmingham | 5,000–10,000[8] | Kelly Ingram Park[9] | |
Huntsville | 100[10] | Protesters assembled on a street corner. | ||
Mentone[11] | 70+[12] | intersection of Alabama Highway 89 and 117. There were around 50 people out of the total population of 360 that showed up.[13] | ||
Mobile | 900–1,000[14] | Protesters assembled in Public Safety Memorial Park and the march lasted approximately 30 minutes.[14] | ||
Alaska | Adak | 10[15][16] | Ten people demonstrated at the westernmost city in the Aleutian Islands.[17] | |
Anchorage | 3,500[17][18] | Thousands protested at the Delaney Park Strip.[17] | ||
Bethel | 75–100[19] | Participants marched from the Cultural Center to the Bethel Native Corporation,[20] in -25 temperatures and with signs in both English and Yup'ik.[21] | ||
Cordova[22] | 108+[23] | Main St.[24] | ||
Craig | 25[25] | Dozens of people came out for the Women's March in Craig.[25] | ||
Fairbanks | 2,000[5][26] | People rallied in subzero temperatures.[17] | ||
Gustavus | 105[16][27] | The march began at the "Welcome to Gustavus" sign by the airport and ended at the Sunnyside at 4 Corners[28] Approximately 100 of the town's 400 residents showed up.[29] | ||
Haines | 150[18] – 170[17] | The march took place despite cold and windy conditions.[25][30] | ||
Homer | 900[18][31] | WKFL Park on Heath Street | ||
Juneau | 1,000[32] | Alaska State Capitol – Juneau Arts and Humanities Council building[25] | ||
Ketchikan | 220[18][33] | Ketchikan's downtown cruise dock | ||
Kodiak | 330[18][15] | The march began in the high school parking lot, looped around downtown and ended at the library.[34] | ||
Kotzebue | 35–36[35] | Above the Arctic Circle, with a temperature of –51, locals in Kotzebue walked along the shore;[36] a couple people got frostbite.[37] | ||
Moose Pass | 15[25] | |||
Nome | 80[38] – 100[18] | Front Street across from the post office – front lawn of Old St. Joe's; temperatures approximately −20 °F (−29 °C) | ||
Palmer | 900–1,000[39] | Turkey Red restaurant[40] | ||
Seldovia | 45[31] | |||
Seward | 54–70[41] | people marched in a snowstorm in Seward, AK | ||
Sitka | 700[18] | Hundreds marched down Lincoln Street from Crescent Harbor shelter to St. Michael's Cathedral, then back past Crescent Harbor shelter to St. Peter's See House.[42] | ||
Skagway | 112[30] | Organizer Annie Kidd Matsov stated that turnout was much higher than expected.[30] | ||
Soldotna | 200–322[43] | Participants started at the library and marched along part of the Kenai Spur Highway that looped back to the library. The march was followed by a community gathering in the library. | ||
Talkeetna | 80[18] | Fairview Inn | ||
Unalakleet | 38[17] | Demonstrators marched in the village, where the temperature was −40 degrees Fahrenheit with the wind chill factor.[17] | ||
Unalaska | 80[44] | Captains Bay Bridge – City Hall | ||
Utqiagvik | 60[45][18] | Participants in Alaska's northernmost city (formerly named Barrow until December 2016) braved temperatures that reached 16 below zero to take part in the event. | ||
Valdez | 100–140[46] | |||
Arizona | Ajo[47] | 250[16] | Ajo Plaza[48] | |
Bisbee[47] | event planned at Grassy Park[49] | |||
Flagstaff | 1,200[47] – 2,000[50] | Flagstaff City Hall – Heritage Square. Despite nearly two feet of snow, a biting wind and initial guesses that Flagstaff's "March for Love" would only attract 200 people, the Flagstaff Police Department estimated that up to 2,000 people attended. | ||
Gold Canyon[47] | 20+[51][52] | Montesa Residential Community March in Pinal County[53] | ||
Green Valley | 400[54] – 500+[55] | Possibly "the largest rally in Green Valley history," it occupied all four corners and medians at intersection of Esperanza Boulevard and La Canada Drive.[54] | ||
Jerome[47] | 85–100[23] | The Parade Steps and Upper Park[56] | ||
Lake Havasu City | 30[57] | march down McCulloch Boulevard, from Acoma to the London Bridge and back | ||
Phoenix | 20,000[47] | The march progressed from the Capitol south to Jefferson, east to 15th Avenue, north to Monroe Street, west to 17th Avenue and back to the Capitol. Speakers at rallies before and after the march included State Rep. Athena Salman (Tempe), U.S. Rep. Ruben Gallego, disability-rights activist Jennifer Longdon (who noted that moments after Trump was sworn in as the 45th president of the United States, the White House website was overhauled to remove pages dedicated to disabilities, civil rights & LGBT issues), Jodi Liggett, Planned Parenthood's vice president of public affairs, and Maricopa County Recorder Adrian Fontes.[47] | ||
Prescott | 1,200[58] | Protesters marched around the courthouse.[59] | ||
Sedona[47] | hundreds[60] | 45 Birch Blvd – marching 89A to first traffic light in uptown[61] | ||
Show Low | 1[62] | One person held her own protest in Show Low, AZ[63][64] | ||
Tucson | 15,000[55] | The march began at Armory Park with 5,000 people, and ended with the Tucson Solidarity Rally at Jacome Plaza near Joel D.Valdez Library,[65] by which time, according to police, the crowd size had tripled. The demonstration was peaceful, with no incidents or arrests reported. Speakers at the rally included US Rep. Raul Grijalva.[66] | ||
Yuma | nearly 300[67][68] | march held on February 5 at Kennedy Park | ||
Arkansas | Bentonville | 500+[69] | Bentonville Square | |
Fayetteville | 100+[70] | Hundreds rallied outside of the Washington County Courthouse. | ||
Helena | 2[23] | |||
Little Rock | 7,000[71][72] | Protesters marched to the Arkansas State Capitol Building. | ||
California | Alameda | 8[27] | ||
Albany | 500[73] | Ocean View Elementary School | ||
Avalon | 44[15] | |||
Bakersfield | 200[74] | corner of California Avenue and Stockdale Highway[75] | ||
Berkeley | 200[76] – 1,000[77] | Hundreds of people showed up on UC Berkeley's campus at Memorial Glade near Doe Library, only to discover that the online rally posting on Action Network had been faked by a prankster who later identified himself (perhaps falsely) as a Russian national.[77] But even without a real event organizer or official marching permit for the city streets, this did not deter people from spontaneously marching all around the college campus.[78] | ||
Beverly Hills[79] | 250[16] – 300 | Rally planned at cross intersection of Wilshire Blvd & Santa Monica Blvd.[80] | ||
Bishop | 580[81] | Eastern Sierra Women's March; Bishop City Park – City Hall[82] | ||
Borrego Springs | 140–150[83] | Borrego Springs Road[84] | ||
Burbank | 300[85] | Chandler Walk Bike Way, Mariposa Blvd – Hollywood Way | ||
Cambria | 100[86] | Veterans Memorial Building – march down Main Street toward East Village | ||
Carmel | few hundred[87] | (Fri, Jan 20) On the day of Trump's inauguration, the People's Rally for Unity & Equality was held inside the Unitarian Universalist Church. | ||
Chico | 2,000–4,000[88] | Thousands packed the Chico City Plaza, and later marched from Fifth St to Broadway St.[89] | ||
Compton[90] | ~40[91] | |||
El Centro | 100[92] | rally at Cardenas Market | ||
Encinitas | 50[93] | A march with 50 senior citizens took place at the Seacrest Village retirement center.[93] | ||
Eureka | 5,000[94] – 8,000[95] | At the dawn of the march, Eureka Police Department estimated nearly 2,000 people at the C Street Market Square. That number grew throughout the march to around 8,000.[95] | ||
Fairfax | 25–60[23] | intersection of Broadway and Bolinas Rd[96] | ||
Fort Bragg | 2,500–2,800[97] | The Mendocino Coast Women's March began at Town Hall and ended at Eagles Hall.[98] | ||
Fresno | 2,000[99] | Protesters gathered at an intersection in North Fresno.[99] | ||
Gualala[100] | 300[101] | event held outside the Old Post Office[102] | ||
Hemet | 100+[103] | Democratic Headquarters - Hemet City Hall[104][105] | ||
Isla Vista | 500[27] | (Jan. 20) At UC Santa Barbara, a few hundred students left class at midday Friday and gathered at Campbell Hall before marching into Anisq’Oyo Park.[106] | ||
June Lake | dozen[82] | At Ohanas 395 & JLB parking lot,[107] a dozen protestors come out, pulling kids in sleds on the snowy streets. | ||
Kings Beach | 500–800[108] | North Tahoe Event Center – Highway 28 – Kings Beach Boat Ramp[109] | ||
Laguna Beach[110] | 1,000[111] – 4,000[112] | Hundreds attended the march at Main Beach.[113] | ||
Laytonville[114] | 25+[115] | |||
Long Beach | 200[116] | Harvey Milk Park – Promenade Square; march organized by The May Day Long Beach Coalition | ||
Lompoc | 300[117] | Protesters lined all four corners of H Street & Ocean Avenue.[118] | ||
Los Angeles | 750,000 | Pershing Square – City Hall. The Los Angeles Police Department stated that "well past" 100,000 people attended the march, but did not attempt to make a more specific estimate. Officials stated that the march was the largest in Los Angeles since a 2006 immigration march attended by 500,000 people.[119] The Los Angeles Daily News reported that 750,000 people were in the crowd.[120] Organizers also said that 750,000 people had participated in the march.[121] | ||
Modesto | 1,000[122] | The march from McHenry and East Briggsmore Avenues to Graceada Park was planned less than a week in advance, and drew a crowd of nearly 1,000 people.[123] | ||
Mt. Shasta | 400+[124] | Parker Plaza | ||
Napa | 3,000+[125] | Protesters lined up roads in downtown Napa, from Oxbow Public Market to Veterans Memorial Park. | ||
Nevada City | 100+[126] | Broad Street bridge over Highway 49 – Commercial Street | ||
Oakhurst | 200[99] | Protesters lined the road to Yosemite National Park from Oakhurst, near Madera, California. | ||
Oakland | 100,000[127] | Madison Park – Frank Ogawa Plaza (via western shore of Lake Merritt, from Grand Ave to Broadway).[128] About 100,000 people marched in Oakland, extending 40 city blocks; BART had to add six extra trains to accommodate the throngs of people.[127] | ||
Ontario[90] | 200[129] | Ontario City Hall – Euclid Avenue median on Euclid Avenue and F Street | ||
Pacifica | 1,000[130] | Pacifica Community Center – highway to Linda Mar Boulevard[131] | ||
Palm Desert | < 1,000[132] | Civic Center Park – Fred Waring Drive – Westfield Mall – El Paseo[133] | ||
Palm Springs | 250[27] – 600[23] | Frances Stevens park;[134] later merged with the Palm Desert Women's March. | ||
Palmdale | few dozen[135] | Antelope Valley Mall | ||
Pasadena | 500+[136] | After amassing on the steps of Pasadena City Hall for an hour, hundreds of people boarded the Metro Gold Line at stations all along the 210 Freeway for the major rally in downtown Los Angeles. | ||
Point Reyes Station | 60[27] | Wells Fargo Bank, across from Yellow House/Town Commons[137] | ||
Quincy | 100+[138] | Plumas County Court House | ||
Redding | 300[139] | Redding City Hall – Interstate 5 | ||
Redondo Beach | 1,800[140] | 245 N Harbor Drive[141] – corner of Harbor Drive and Portofino Way | ||
Redwood City | 5,000 | The rally was "inspired by and held in solidarity with" Saturday's Women's March on Washington, organizers said. Joan Baez performed and Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-Menlo Park) and state Senator Jerry Hill (D-San Mateo) spoke.[142] | ||
Ridgecrest | 180–200[143] | corner of China Lake and Drummond – Petroglyph Park | ||
Riverside | 4,000[103] | Thousands marched along the Downtown Main Street Mall.[144] | ||
Sacramento | 20,000[145] | 20,000 marched from Southside Park to the California State Capitol. | ||
Salinas | 80[87] | (Jan. 20) Closter Park. Salinas Mayor Joe Gunter spoke at the event. | ||
San Bernardino[90] | 80[129] | San Bernardino City Unified School District Board of Education | ||
San Clemente | several hundred[146] | Avenida Del Mar; one organizer said that 652 had attended.[146] | ||
San Diego | 30,000–40,000[147] | In downtown San Diego, an estimated 30,000 to 40,000 marched from Civic Center Plaza, along Broadway and Harbor Drive, to the County Administration Center. State Sen. Toni Atkins (D-San Diego) spoke at the event.[147] | ||
San Francisco | 100,000–150,000[148][149] | The rally was held at Civic Center Plaza, where San Francisco City Hall was lit pink in observance of the protest.[150] Performer and activist Joan Baez serenaded the crowd with "We Shall Overcome" in Spanish.[151] | ||
San Jose | 25,000[152] | City Hall plaza – Plaza de Cesar Chavez.[150] San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo tweeted an overhead photo of a "beautiful crowd" around City Hall, and added a hashtag that said "This is what democracy looks like."[153] | ||
San Leandro | (Fri, Jan 20) march planned: San Leandro BART Station – San Leandro City Hall[154][155] | |||
San Luis Obispo | 7,000–10,000[86] | In spite of pouring rain, protesters gathered at Mitchell Park, at the corner of Pismo and Osos Streets, then marched a 1-mile loop along Marsh, Broad & Higuera Streets.[156] | ||
San Marcos | 3,000[157] – 10,000[158] | San Marcos Civic Center – Palomar College.[83] Fewer than 2,000 were expected, but the turnout was so large that instead of walking on sidewalks along Mission Ave, as was planned and permitted, people flooded the street, shutting down half the lanes to traffic, for 1.7 miles.[157] | ||
San Rafael | 500[27] | (Jan 20) rallies planned at San Rafael & B Street Community Theater[159] | ||
Santa Ana | 20,000–25,000[110][160] | Throngs of people marched along Fourth St and past the Ronald Reagan Federal Building and US Courthouse.[110] | ||
Santa Barbara | 6,000+[161] | Thousands of women and men participated in a rally at De La Guerra Plaza.[162] Speakers included Santa Barbara Mayor Helene Schneider, Councilmember Cathy Murillo, and State Assemblywoman Monique Limón.[106] | ||
Santa Cruz | 15,000+[163] | Santa Cruz City Hall – Pacific Avenue and Louden Nelson Community Center. Several people commented that it was the largest march in Santa Cruz history.[164] | ||
Santa Rosa | 5,000[165] | People marched through downtown Santa Rosa. Former representative Lynn Woolsey and Representative Jared Huffman spoke. | ||
Seaside | 2,000[166] – 4,000[167] | Women's March CSU Monterey Bay began at Main Quad and ended with a rally inside the Otter Sports Complex.[168] | ||
Sonoma | 3,000 | Marchers proceeded around the historic Sonoma Plaza, blocking traffic for over an hour.[169] | ||
South Lake Tahoe | 500[170] – 700[171] | Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Stateline, Nevada – South Lake Tahoe Senior Center. | ||
Truckee | 150[27] | |||
Ukiah | 2,000 | Attendees gathered at Alex R. Thomas Jr. Plaza. Joelle Schultz, director of Ukiah's Planned Parenthood, addressed the crowd along with local activists.[172] | ||
Vallejo | 40[173] | Vallejo Ferry Building – City Hall | ||
Ventura | 2,500[174] | Plaza Park – Mission Park, via Thompson Boulevard[175] | ||
Visalia | 500[176] | A demonstration occurred at Blain Park.[99] | ||
Walnut Creek | 10,000[177] | Streets were closed as thousands marched in downtown Walnut Creek. Speakers at the march included state Senators Nancy Skinner and Steve Glazer, and US Reps Eric Swalwell and Mark DeSaulnier.[177] | ||
Watsonville | 300–500 | On Thursday, Jan 19, hundreds gathered for a rally dubbed "Hands Around the [Watsonville] Plaza – Unity Through Diversity."[178] On Saturday morning, Jan 21, over a hundred people rallied again at the Watsonville Plaza before boarding a bus to the Santa Cruz March.[179] | ||
Willits | 60[115] | Willits arch | ||
Winters | 200[23] | |||
Yucca Valley | 100[180] | corner of Twentynine Palms Highway and Old Woman Springs Road | ||
Colorado | Alamosa[181] | 350[182] | The march began at the corner of Hwy. 160 and Richardson Avenue in Alamosa, went down and around the hospital, and back to the campus.[182] | |
Aspen | 500[183] – 1,000[184] | Protesters marched to Wagner Park.[185] | ||
Broomfield | 225[186] | Mamie Doud Eisenhower Public Library; loop around the pond | ||
Carbondale[187] | 700[188] | A mile-long line of 700 people formed in Carbondale, CO (population 6,500)[15] from The Goat parking lot to Highway 133 to the roundabout.[189] | ||
Colorado Springs | 7,000[190] | Acacia Park – downtown Colorado Springs. | ||
Cortez | 400–504[191] | Cortez City Park, Montezuma Ave – Colorado Welcome Center on Main St | ||
Crested Butte | 350–400[192] | Crested Butte 4-Way Stop, Elk Avenue[193] | ||
Denver | 100,000–200,000[194] | People arrived as early as 8:00 am CMT to protest at the Civic Center and march downtown. | ||
Durango | 200[16] | Hundreds marched through a foot of snow down Main Avenue.[195] | ||
Fort Collins | 600[196] | (Jan 22) "Rally for our Rights" was held on Sunday at Northside Aztlan Community Center; organized by Fort Collins for Progress | ||
Glenwood Springs | 100[197] | Centennial Park[198] – march downtown[199] | ||
Grand Junction | 1,000[200] | Old R-5 High School Parking Lot (Grand Ave & 7th St in GJ)[201] | ||
Lafayette | 66–112[23] | |||
Minturn | 6[23] | |||
Paonia | 40[27] | |||
Ridgway | 50[202] | event planned at 304 South Lena Street[203] | ||
Salida | 40–50[204] | Alpine Park – Riverside Park | ||
Silverton | 33[16] | |||
Steamboat Springs | 1,000[205] | Protesters started marching at Bud Werner Memorial Library and ended at Third Street. A rally was then held at the Routt County Courthouse. | ||
Telluride | 500[206] – 1,000[15] | Oak Street Mall (next to San Miguel County Courthouse)[207] – Elks Park.[208] Olympic skier Gus Kenworthy noted that half the residents of the town participated.[209] | ||
Connecticut | East Haddam | 100–500[210] | Hundreds rallied outside Two Wrasslin' Cats Coffee House & Café in East Haddam, near New London. | |
Hartford | 10,000[211] | The march had the support of Governor Dannel Malloy.[212] | ||
Kent | 180[213] | Town Hall – Civil War Monument | ||
Lakeville | 85–100[23] | |||
Milford | 120[214] | (Jan 20) Milford City Hall | ||
New Haven | 200[215] | Beinecke Plaza, Yale campus – the Green | ||
Old Saybrook | 1,000[216] | Participants marched down Main Street and gathered in front of Town Hall.[217] | ||
Salisbury | 500[218] | Salisbury Green at the White Hart Inn[219] | ||
Stamford | 5,000 | People marched peacefully in Stamford, Connecticut, after a rally in the Mill River Park.[220] The protesters marched around the city blocks surrounding the Trump Parc Stamford building, a building managed by the Trump Organization,[221] a display of resistance to President Donald Trump's policies. The number of demonstrators was reportedly four times larger than organizers expected,[220] according to event Organizer, Lisa Boyne.[222] The rally was originally planned to be held indoors at the UCONN, Stamford campus, but was moved outdoors to the Mill River Park when attendance was expected to exceed 800.[223] | ||
Delaware | Lewes | 250+ | People walked along Lewes Beach in Cape Henlopen State Park in solidarity.[224] | |
Newark | 1,000 | People participated in a 2.4-mile march.[225] | ||
Florida | Boca Raton | 120 | A "Stand up for American Values" rally, organized by the local Democratic club, was held at the corner of Glades Road and St. Andrews Boulevard.[226] | |
Daytona Beach | hundreds | A few hundred protesters assembled at a bandstand in town and sang Give Peace a Chance.[227] | ||
Fernandina Beach | 1,000[228] – 1,367[229] | The Amelia Island Solidarity March began at downtown Fernandina Beach and participants followed the route normally taken during the annual Shrimp Festival, concluding at Central Park.[228][230] The Fernandina Beach News-Leader wrote that the rally "may have been the largest number of people to participate in a march on Amelia Island since federal troops invaded in March 1862."[231] | ||
Gainesville | 1,500[232] | People rallied along Newberry Road. | ||
Jacksonville | 2,000–3,000[233] | Thousands marched through the streets to the Jacksonville Landing.[234] | ||
Key West | 3,500[235] | Crowds marched down Duval Street to Mallory Square. Marion County Commissioner Heather Carruthers spoke at the event and organizer Jamie Mattingly led the crowds in a rendition of John Lennon's Imagine.[236] Author Judy Blume also participated.[237] | ||
Melbourne | 500 | A demonstration was held on the Eau Gallie Causeway[238] | ||
Miami Beach | event planned on the Norwegian Pearl Jam Cruise[239] | |||
Miami | 10,000+[240] | The demonstration at Bayfront Park in Miami, Florida reached capacity of more than 10,000 and demonstrators began flooding the streets.[241] | ||
Naples | 2,500 | Protesters gathered at Cambier Park and then marched through the streets.[242] | ||
New Smyrna Beach | 1,000 | Protesters marched across the North Causeway.[227] | ||
Ocala | 300[243] | rally at the downtown square | ||
Orlando | 6,000+[244] | The demonstration was held at Lake Eola Park, in Downtown.[245] | ||
Panama City | 500[246] | A rally was held at McKenzie Park, followed by a protest march down Harrison Avenue. | ||
Pensacola | 2,000[247] | A demonstration was held at the Plaza de Luna. | ||
Sarasota | 10,000+ | Thousands marched over the Ringling Causeway Bridge. Author Stephen King participated in the march.[248] | ||
St. Augustine | 2,000+[249] | Marchers walked across Bridge of Lions and a rally was held in the Plaza de la Constitucion.[250] | ||
St. Petersburg | 20,000+[251] | Over 20,000 people marched in downtown St. Petersburg (Demen's Landing Park – Bayshore Drive and Beach Drive), making it the largest demonstration in the city's history. Mayor Rick Kriseman declared Saturday as Women's Rights Day in St. Petersburg.[252] | ||
Tallahassee | 14,000+[253] | Over 14,000 people of the capital's communities showed up to protest. Despite forecasts for heavy rain, the crowd poured into the Railroad Square Arts location before marching up the road to the Florida A&M University Recreation center. Most of the protesters turned out for the march, and due to the small indoor venue, less than a tenth of those attending were able to view the speakers rally. This may be the largest protest in Florida's capitol history. | ||
West Palm Beach | 5,000–7,000[254] | Meyer Amphitheatre[226] | ||
Georgia | Athens | 700[255] – 4,500[16][256] | A rally was held at the Classic Center venue near the Athena statue. | |
Atlanta | 60,000[257][258] | The march began at the Center for Civil and Human Rights and stretched more than a mile, ending at the Georgia State Capitol.[257] US Rep. John Lewis and House Minority Leader Stacey Abrams (D-Atlanta) attended the Atlanta march and rally.[258] | ||
Augusta | 600[259] | Despite tornado warnings and severe thunderstorms, "Augusta Solidairty" attracted 600 marchers to downtown Augusta.[260] | ||
Savannah | 1,000+ | Hundreds of protesters converged upon Johnson and Wright Squares.[261] | ||
Statesboro | 200[262] | A march on at Georgia Southern University drew around 200 participants, who marched from Sweetheart Circle to the Rotunda, where they then held a rally. | ||
Zebulon | 35[263] | People braved a storm while rallying outside Magistrate Court of Pike County. | ||
Guam | Hagåtña | 100+[264] | Participants marched in the Fanohge Famalao'an: Guåhan March in solidarity. | |
Hawaii | Hana[265] | 100+[266][267] | Hana Bay | |
Hilo | 1,500–2,000[268] | Hilo Women's March and Gathering at the Moʻoheau Bandstand and around downtown[269] | ||
Honolulu (Oahu) | 3,000[270] – 8,000[271] | Thousands of people marched around the Hawaiian State Capitol.[270] | ||
Kahului (Maui) | 1,500[272] – 5,000[273] | The march was assembled at University of Hawaiʻi Maui College.[272] | ||
Kaunakakai (Molokai) | 75–100[274] | Molokaʻi Public Library, 15 Ala Malama St – baseball park | ||
Kawaihae | 50 | Na Wahine for Women's Rights took their march to the water with a group paddle at Kawaihae Small Boat Harbor on the Big Island.[275] | ||
Kona | 3,000[276] – 3,500[277] | Queen Ka'ahumanu Highway, south of Henry Street – The Edible World Institute, off Kopiko Street[269] | ||
Lihue (Kauai) | 1,645+[278] | On Saturday morning, 145 people marched from the Kauai War Memorial Convention Hall to the Historic County Building. Later that day, over 1,500 people lined both sides of Ahukini Road for a sign-waving event. | ||
Idaho | Boise | 5,000[279] | Heavy snow began to fall in Boise as marchers gathered at 10 a.m. on the Idaho State Capitol steps, and that later turned to rain. | |
Driggs | 1,000+[280] | Teton County Courthouse[281] – Driggs City Plaza[282] | ||
Idaho Falls | 500[283] | Snake River Landing – Capitol, Broadway, Memorial – Unitarian Universalist Church.[284] | ||
Ketchum | 1,150+[285] | Ketchum Town Square – Main Street / nexStage Theatre[286] | ||
Moscow | 2,500+[287] | Titled "Women's March on the Palouse", the event was centered in Moscow, ID near Washington State University and University of Idaho. The march started at Moscow City Hall and ended at East City Park. | ||
Pocatello | 1,000–1,200[288] | Caldwell Park – Pond Student Union Building, Idaho State University campus[289] | ||
Sandpoint | 800–1,000[290] | Panida Theater – Statue of Liberty at City Beach | ||
Stanley | 30[291] | Half the town of Stanley, Idaho (population 63) turned out for the rally, including resident singer Carole King.[15] | ||
Illinois | Carbondale | 800[292] – 1,000[293] | Carbondale Civic Center | |
Champaign-Urbana | 5,000[294] | 5,000 people gathered at West Side Park in downtown Champaign. | ||
Chicago | 250,000[295] | Organizers for the sister march in Chicago, Illinois, initially prepared for a crowd of 22,000.[296] An estimated 250,000 protesters[297] gathered in Grant Park for an initial rally to be followed by a march, with attendance far more than expected.[298] As a result, the official march was cancelled, although marchers then flooded the streets of the Chicago Loop.[299] Liz Radford, an organizer, informed the crowd, "We called, and you came. We have flooded the march route. We have flooded Chicago."[298] | ||
Elgin | 200–1,000[300] | Event held at Hemmens Cultural Center (capacity 1,200).[301] | ||
Galesburg | 100–500[302] | A march through downtown Galesburg began with a rally at Knox County Courthouse. | ||
Maryville | 40–50[303] | Event was planned at the playground.[304] | ||
Peoria | 1,500[305] – 2,000[306] | The rally was held from 10 a.m. to noon at the Gateway Building,[307] with an estimated 2,000 people on the Peoria river front.[308] Among the speakers was state representative Jehan Gordon-Booth. A follow-up Facebook group was formed to maintain organization for future rallies.[308] | ||
Rockford | 1,000+[309] | Lucette Salon & Spa – Emmanuel Episcopal Church. About two dozen pro-life counterprotesters were also present. | ||
Springfield | 1,000+[310] | US Sen. Dick Durbin spoke to the rally at the Old State Capitol. | ||
Indiana | Angola | few dozen[311] | rally near Angola round-about (Steuben County Soldiers Monument)[312][313] | |
Evansville | 200+[314] | (Friday, Jan 20) Hundreds gathered at the Four Freedoms Monument along the downtown waterfront.[315] | ||
Fort Wayne | 1,000[316] | An estimated 1,000 people rallied in the Allen County Courthouse Square Saturday afternoon to support women's rights, celebrate diversity and send a message to the White House. | ||
Indianapolis | 4,500–5,000[317] | The protest at the Indiana State Capitol was the city's largest rally in recent memory. | ||
Lafayette | 800[318] | Tippecanoe County Courthouse | ||
Paoli | 67[319] | Orange County Courthouse | ||
South Bend | 1,000+[320] | Morris Performing Arts Center / Jon Hunt Plaza. South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg made an appearance.[321] | ||
St. Mary of the Woods[322] | 200+[323] | More than 200 people from Terre Haute and beyond attended the one-hour event outside the Church of the Immaculate Conception.[324] | ||
Terre Haute | 200[324] | Around 200 people protested, first at Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College, then at the Vigo County Courthouse, and then by a march through downtown Terre Haute.[324] | ||
Valparaiso | 260–500[325] | Porter County Courthouse | ||
Iowa | Bettendorf | 350[16][326] | Several hundred people from around the Quad Cities region participated. The crowd overflowed onto the lawn of the United Steelworkers local where the rally was held.[326] | |
Decorah | 800–1,000[327] | Protesters marched to the Winneshiek County Courthouse. | ||
Des Moines | 26,000[328] | The march near the Iowa State Capitol included women, men and children supporting women's rights and healthcare, environmental issues, and immigration.[328] | ||
Dubuque | 400+[329][330] | Town Clock Plaza[331] | ||
Fairfield | 200 | Fairfield Arts & Convention Center[332] | ||
Harpers Ferry | 5[333] | The smallest Iowa 2017 sister march occurred in the northeastern town of Harpers Ferry (population less than 300). | ||
Iowa City | 1,000[334] | Over a thousand people marched a half-mile to the Old Capitol Building, where State Rep. Mary Mascher (D-Iowa City) addressed the crowd. | ||
Kansas | Topeka | 4,200[335] | State Capitol Building[336] | |
Wichita | 3,000 | Protesters marched to City Hall.[337] | ||
Kentucky | Lexington | 5,000[338] | Fayette County Courthouse | |
Louisville | 5,000[339] | People showed up at Louisville's Metro Hall for The Rally To Move Forward in Louisville, Kentucky.[339] Congressman John Yarmuth from Louisville was scheduled to speak.[340] | ||
Murray | 700+[341] | Murray State University campus – downtown | ||
Owensboro | 15–30[27] | |||
Pikeville | 100[342] | Pikeville City Park[343] | ||
Louisiana | Monroe | 30+ | Monroe City Hall – "Celebration of Healing" sculpture in downtown Monroe[344][345] | |
New Orleans | 10,000–15,000[346] | At one point, the procession spanned the entire march route, from Washington Square Park all the way to Duncan Plaza, next to City Hall. The 10,000+ protesters were joined by members of Our Revolution NOLA, NOW Baton Rouge and the Millennial's March. Actor Seth Rogen tweeted video from New Orleans.[237] | ||
Shreveport | few hundred[347] | Hundreds of people marched around the Caddo Parish Courthouse in Shreveport to demonstrate their solidarity with the Women's March on Washington.[348] | ||
Maine | Augusta | 10,000+[349] | There were 5,000 people registered to attend the rally in Augusta. In fact, 10,000 people attended, making this the largest Women's March in the state. The crowd assembled for speeches at the State House.[350] | |
Brunswick[351] | 300[352] | Town Mall[353] | ||
Eastport[354] | 111[355] | Over 100 people from 13 communities walked in the march in Eastport, which started in front of the schools at 10 a.m. and ended at the Fish Pier parking lot.[355] | ||
Ellsworth[351][356] | 60[357] | |||
Gouldsboro[351] | 25–45[357] | Dorcas Library, Prospect Harbor[358] | ||
Fort Kent | 50[359] | Event took place at Christ Congregational Church on Pleasant Street. | ||
Kennebunk[351] | 400–700[360] | People lined both sides of Main St & Rte 1 from the Waterhouse Pavilion to Shopper's Village.[361] | ||
Lubec | hundreds[355] | Flatiron Corner | ||
Monhegan Island | 22[23] | 22 people were counted on an island with a population of 34[23] | ||
Portland | 10,000+[351] | Women's Walk Portland, one of the largest protest marches ever held in the city, stretched more than a mile along Congress Street from Munjoy Hill to Congress Square Park, and drew far more people than expected. Portland police said the size of the orderly protest crowd was "of historic proportions"; marchers were five to six people abreast. Only a few hundred could fit into Congress Square Park's rally while the rest milled around the surrounding blocks.[362] | ||
Sanford | 100[363] | March took place in Central Park. | ||
Surry[354] | ||||
Tenants Harbor | 50–60[364] | The Tenants Harbor march Jan. 21 ran from the St. George Town Office to the post office and back. | ||
Vinalhaven[354] | 76[365] – 100[23] | |||
Maryland | Accident | 54[366] | A bus of people traveling from St. Louis, Missouri to Washington, D.C. broke down in Accident, Maryland and the group became stranded for nine hours waiting for a replacement bus. The group marched around the parking lot of the gas station/diner/convenience store where they were stranded. When the replacement bus arrived, it was too late to make it to Washington so they turned around and drove the 10 hours back to St. Louis. | |
Annapolis | 1,600[367] | People marched along Main Street to the Maryland State House in Maryland's capital city.[368] | ||
Baltimore | 5,000[369] | A sister women's march took place outside of Johns Hopkins University in North Baltimore. Notable figures included former Maryland Senator Paul Sarbanes and State's Attorney for Baltimore Marilyn Mosby.[370] Additional marchers en route to Washington, D.C., were lined up around the block at Pennsylvania Station waiting for MARC express trains to Union Station. | ||
Frederick | 1,000[371] | Protestors began marching at Market and Patrick Streets to Carroll Creek Park in Downtown Frederick.[371] | ||
Ocean City | 200[16] | Hundreds of protesters marched along the boardwalk to the Division Street Plaza.[372] | ||
St. Mary's City | 10[23] | |||
Massachusetts | Boston | 150,000[373] – 175,000[374] | Hundreds of thousands of people gathered at the Boston Common; Boston Mayor Marty Walsh, Attorney General Maura Healey[375] and US Senators Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey spoke to the crowd.[376] Protesters then marched around the Public Garden and halfway down the Commonwealth Avenue Mall. | |
Bridgewater | dozen+[27][377] | |||
Falmouth | 1,500[378] | Falmouth Village Green. US Rep William Keating spoke to the crowd. | ||
Greenfield | 2,000+[379] | Approximately two thousand people peacefully gathered on the Greenfield Town Common to hold the Women Standing Our Ground Rally in solidarity with the Women's March on Washington. | ||
Harwich | 200[380] | intersection of Route 124 and 39 | ||
Martha's Vineyard | 160[381] | Five Corners[382] | ||
Nantucket | 400[383] | Atheneum Park[384] | ||
Northampton | 1,000+[385] | Over a thousand people marched through downtown Northampton, ending with a peaceful demonstration at Pulaski Park where various local activists gave speeches. | ||
Pittsfield | 1,640[386] | More than double the number of people that organizer's expected came to the Colonial Theatre in Pittsfield to protest and watch the coverage of the Washington, D.C., march. The event concluded with a staged reading of monologues responding to the election and cultural climate. | ||
Provincetown | 300+[387][388] | Hundreds marched at the tip of Cape Cod to the MacMillan Pier in Provincetown Harbor. | ||
Southborough | 50[389] | St. Anne Church | ||
Springfield | 40+[390] | Mason Square | ||
Wellfleet | 113[23] | Event held at Wellfleet Town Hall[391] | ||
Worcester | ~7[392] | Billed as a coalition of local groups opposing President Trump's 'fascist policies', Worcester's sparsely attended rally coincided with others in the nation's capital, New York City and Boston. Organizer Gordon T. Davis said the low turnout in Worcester had to do with area residents attending rallies in the larger cities.[392] | ||
Michigan | Adrian | 150[393] | old county courthouse | |
Ann Arbor | 11,000[394] – 20,000[395] | Protesters rallied downtown and marched to the Univ. of Michigan campus where they attended a rally, the largest in Michigan. Speakers included Rep. Debbie Dingell, UAW Vice President Cindy Estrada, Vice Chair County Commission and March Organizer Michelle Deatrick.[396] | ||
Beaver Island | 18[397] – 22[398] | |||
Brighton | 300[399] | Brighton Mill Pond | ||
Clare | dozens[400] | gazebo in the center of Clare City Park | ||
Copper Harbor | 19–25[401] | tip of the Keweenaw Peninsula in Upper Michigan (winter population: 100) | ||
Detroit | 4,000 | People protested at the campus of Wayne State University in Midtown Detroit.[402][403] | ||
Douglas-Saugatuck | 1,200–2,500[404] | Beery Field, Douglas – Blue Star Highway Bridge over the Kalamazoo River – Lucy's Little Kitchen, Saugatuck | ||
Grand Rapids | 3,000[405] | Thousands of people gathered for a rally at the Fountain Street Church before marching through Downtown to the Rosa Parks Circle.[405] | ||
Grosse Pointe[406] | few hundred[407] | Maire School, corner of Kercheval and Cadieux Roads – Park (Wayburn St)[408] | ||
Harrisville | 5[409] | |||
Houghton | 500+[410] | People participated in a march across the Portage Lake Lift Bridge between Houghton and Hancock in Michigan's largely conservative Upper Peninsula.[411] | ||
Kalamazoo | 1,000+[412] | The march proceeded from WMU's campus along West Michigan Avenue to the Kalamazoo Mall downtown. | ||
Lansing | 8,000[413] – 10,000[414] | Thousands gathered at the Michigan State Capitol in solidarity of all groups who have been marginalized by the actions of Donald Trump. Recently declared Democratic candidate for governor Gretchen Whitmer spoke at the event.[413] | ||
Marquette | 800–1,000[410] | courthouse & Post Office, West Washington St[415] Marquette, a city in the Upper Peninsula, saw "almost unprecedented turnout" for the event, according to one local newspaper: 800 people signed into the event, which was held in a city of just over 21,000. Organizers estimated that over a thousand actually turned up but did not sign their name.[410][416] | ||
Midland | 400 | A bus carrying a third of the Tri-Cities' Washington, D.C.-bound marchers experienced mechanical problems, which increased the attendance at the downtown Midland protest.[417] | ||
St. Joseph | 60[418] | |||
Sault Ste Marie | 40[419] | Sault Ste Marie Courthouse on Queen St | ||
Tecumseh | 35[420] | |||
Traverse City | 3,000[421] | People marched past Votruba Leather Goods' Front Street windows for more than an hour. Officers barricaded Garland St to give the thousands of demonstrators a place to safely gather after the march. | ||
Ypsilanti | 1,500[422] | Bona Sera Restaurant[423] | ||
Minnesota | Bemidji | 250–500[424] | Sanford Center[425] – downtown Bemidji | |
Cambridge | 22[27] | |||
Duluth | 1,400[426] | People marched through the Skywalk System in Downtown Duluth, filling it from one end to the other.[427] | ||
Ely | 50[428] | Whiteside Park | ||
Grand Marais | 120[429] | A small crowd of 10 gathered at the courthouse at 10 am. As they marched past City Hall, more people fell in line; by the time they reached Harbor Park, the rally had grown to 120 people. | ||
Longville | 66[424] | In Longville, MN, a town of about 150 people, retired librarian Michelle Barton prepared for a solo march, her worst-case scenario being "people driving by and taking potshots at me". Instead, more than 60 others joined her.[15] | ||
Mankato | 50[424] | Jackson Park | ||
Minneapolis | hundreds[430] | (Friday, Jan. 20) Lake & Nicollet – City Hall (see St. Paul for the larger Twin Cities march on January 21). | ||
Morris | 250 | A 30-minute march took place around downtown Morris, centralized around the Stevens County Courthouse.[431] | ||
Rochester | 600–1,000 | A protest was held at Silver Lake.[432] | ||
St. Cloud | 40[433] | A rally was held at Lake George on January 20, followed by a protest march down Minnesota Highway 23. | ||
St. Paul | 90,000–100,000[434] | People marched to the Minnesota State Capitol from Cathedral Hill and various other parts of the city. A spokesman for the St. Paul Police stated it was the largest protest in the city since the 2008 Republican National Convention. State Rep. Ilhan Omar (DFL-Minneapolis) participated in the march and rally.[435] | ||
Mississippi | Gulfport | 300+ | More than 300 people showed up at Cafe Climb.[436] | |
Hattiesburg | 0 | The morning march from Hattiesburg City Hall[437] was canceled by a tornado that hit early Saturday.[436] | ||
Jackson | 1,000 | Mississippi State Capitol – Governor's Mansion.[438] | ||
Oxford | 450 | On the Courthouse Square, attendees built an "action wall" of follow-up actions.[439] | ||
Missouri | Columbia | 2,000[440] – 3,000[441] | Mid-Missouri Solidarity March; Boone County Courthouse Plaza – downtown | |
Jefferson City[442] | event planned at the Missouri State Capitol[443] | |||
Kansas City | 10,000[444] | The demonstration was held at Washington Square Park in downtown Kansas City.[444] | ||
Springfield | 2,000+ | People marched to Park Central Square in downtown Springfield. The parade made its way from the parking lot at Springfield's municipal court building, across the Martin Luther King Jr. Bridge and over to Park Central Square where several speakers addressed the crowd. The rally touched on political issues in addition to women's rights. One speaker, Bethany Johnson, a transgender woman, spoke and drew some of the loudest cheers. She also mentioned the 2015 vote that repealed the city's ordinance banning LGBT discrimination in the workplace. Johnson banged the podium and called on the marchers to contact their politicians.[445] | ||
St. Louis | 13,000 | People marched peacefully in downtown St. Louis from Union Station to a rally at Luther Ely Smith Square.[446] | ||
Willow Springs | 30[447] | A rally was held on the sidewalk by the Star Theatre. | ||
Montana | Bozeman | 13[23] | ||
Helena | 10,000[448] | People marched through the city and around the Montana State Capitol.[449][450] | ||
Miles City | 500[27] | march planned along Main Street on the sidewalks from Riverside Park to 10th St and back[451] | ||
Missoula | 80–110[452] | |||
Nebraska | Alliance | ~125[27] | ||
Lincoln | 2,000–3,000[453] | Approximately 2,000 to 3,000 people gathered outside the University of Nebraska-Lincoln Student Union. 40 members of the fraternity Phi Gamma Delta held a counter protest by waving Trump flags off their balcony. | ||
Loup City | 125+[454] | More than 125 people gathered in the town of Loup City, where the town has a total population of just over 1,000 residents. | ||
Omaha | 12,000–14,000[455] | The peaacful march was so large – far exceeding organizers' expectations of 2,000 to 4,000 people – that at times it stretched for 14 blocks, from the CenturyLink Center to the Old Market. | ||
Nevada | Las Vegas | 5,000+[456] | People marched from East Fremont Street, south on Las Vegas Boulevard to outside the Lloyd D. George Federal District Courthouse.[457] | |
Reno | 10,000[456] | Protesters marched down Virginia Street to the BELIEVE sign at City Plaza.[458] | ||
Stateline | 500[459] | |||
New Hampshire | Concord | 1,000+[460] | More than a thousand marches attended the New Hampshire Women's Day of Action and Unity rally in front of the New Hampshire State House. U.S. Senator Jeanne Shaheen and others spoke.[460] | |
Francestown | 140[461] | The peaceful marchers walked up and down Main Street and then gathered around the Francestown Meetinghouse for speeches.[462][463] | ||
Jackson | 300+[464] | Jackson Grammar School parking lot, adjacent to the Jackson Marketplace[465] | ||
Keene | 300[466] | Central Square | ||
Lancaster | 400[467] | Great North Woods Welcome Center – Main Street.[468] Hundreds of protesters from both New Hampshire and Vermont turned out in Lancaster, NH.[469] | ||
Peterborough | 55[27] | |||
Portsmouth | 3,000–5,000[470] | Most people rallied at Market Square while others marched down Congress St to Maplewood Ave. | ||
Wilton | 200[471] | Main Street Park | ||
New Jersey | Asbury Park | 6,000 | Protesters marched to Convention Hall.[472] Singer/songwriter Patti Scialfa attended the march as well as U.S. Representative Frank Pallone.[473] | |
Leonia | 250[474] | Broad Street – Wood Park | ||
Metuchen[473] | ||||
Mt. Laurel[475] | 20[476] | |||
Pequannock Township / Pompton Plains | 800[477] – 1,000[478] | Pequannock Township Hall / 530 Newark-Pompton Turnpike[475] | ||
Red Bank | 200[479] | Riverside Gardens Park | ||
Sicklerville | 200[480] | Gloucester Township Community Park[481][482] | ||
South Orange | 200[483] | gazebo near the South Orange train station – Spiotta Park | ||
Trenton | 6,000[484] – 7,500[485] | Protesters marched from an overflowing rally in and around the Trenton War Memorial auditorium to another rally outside the State House.[486] | ||
Westfield | 2,000[16] | Protesters marched in Westfield to Representative Leonard Lance's office.[487] | ||
Wyckoff[474] | 300–500[475] | Franklin Avenue outside Municipal Hall | ||
New Mexico | Albuquerque | 10,000[488] | Protesters rallied at the Civic Plaza.[489] US Sen. Tom Udall attended the rally.[490] | |
Deming | 45–50[491] | Leyendecker Plaza Park – Courthouse Park[492] | ||
El Morro | 30[493] | Ancient Way Café | ||
Fort Sumner | event planned at Dallas Park[494] | |||
Gila | 1[490] | |||
Las Cruces | 1,500[495] | SW Environmental Law Center[494] / Plaza de Las Cruces. More than 20 groups were involved in the march, which brought out 1,500 concerned residents.[496] | ||
Las Vegas | 50[27] | |||
Portales | 70[490] | Roosevelt County Courthouse[497] | ||
Roswell | 2[23][27] | |||
Santa Fe | 10,000–15,000[498] | Thousands of Santa Feans and other northern New Mexicans marched and held signs in a rally that surrounded the Roundhouse.[499] Santa Fe Mayor Javier Gonzales was present.[490] | ||
Silver City | 500[27] | People's Procession: La Capilla / Spring Street Park – Gough Park[500] | ||
Taos[490] | 100[27] | (Jan 20) We Go High: Alternative Inauguration Day Gathering, Taos Plaza[501] | ||
Truth or Consequences[490] | 154[27] | event planned at Healing Waters Plaza[494] | ||
New York | Albany | 7,000+ | At the State Capitol, a crowd of 7,000 exceeded the initial prediction of 2,000.[502] | |
Binghamton | 3,000[503] | The march was held downtown and exceeded initial estimates for the event. | ||
Buffalo | 2,500–3,000[504] | A march in Niagara Square drew demonstrators and local politicians. | ||
Canton | 135[505] | |||
Cobleskill | 350[506] | Main Street – Centre Park | ||
Cooperstown | 200+[507] | Otsego County Courthouse | ||
Delhi | 200[508] | |||
Fredonia | 70[509] | Mason Hall, State University of New York at Fredonia | ||
Glens Falls | 1,500[510] | Centennial Circle | ||
Hudson | 2,000[511] – 3,000[512] | 7th Street Park – Warren Street[513] | ||
Ithaca | 10,000[514] | The demonstration began and ended on the Ithaca Commons. | ||
Lewis | several hundred[515][516] | Adirondack-Champlain Valley Women's March; famed suffragette Inez Milholland was honored at her grave site in Lewis Cemetery behind the Congregational Church.[517] | ||
New York City | 400,000[518] | In Manhattan, hundreds of thousands marched. The rally began at Dag Hammarskjöld Plaza (near Trump World Tower and the United Nations) and then proceeded to Trump Tower as well as Trump's home.[519][520][521] The Office of the Mayor of New York City announced that the number of attendees was over 400,000.[522] | ||
Oneonta | 500+[507] | Muller Plaza | ||
Plattsburgh[523] | 700[515][524] | North Country March for Unity and Respect | ||
Port Jefferson | 2,000[525] | intersection of Routes 347 and 112 | ||
Port Jervis | 350–500[526] | St. Peter's Lutheran Church | ||
Poughkeepsie | 5,000 | The march took place on the Walkway over the Hudson.[527] | ||
Rochester | 1,000–2,000[528] | People's Solidarity Rally at Washington Square Park.[529] The protests were mostly peaceful, but 7 people were arrested for punching a photographer that was covering the event, and for disrupting the peaceful protests.[528] | ||
Sag Harbor | 250[530] | Men, women, and children gathered by the windmill on the Long Wharf around noon and then marched up and down Main Street. | ||
Seneca Falls | 10,000[531] | The event started at the Women's Rights National Historical Park, the Seneca Falls Convention, an early convention on women's rights in 1848.[532] | ||
Syracuse | 2,000+[533] | James Hanley Federal Building | ||
Utica | 100+[534] | Over 100 people gathered in front of Mohawk Valley Community College and the Utica State Office Building to join in the march.[535][536] | ||
Watertown | 250+[537] | All Souls Unitarian Universalist Church | ||
Woodstock | 1,000 | The march ran from the Andy Lee Field parking lot down Rock City Road to Mill Hill Road.[538] | ||
North Carolina | Asheville | 7,000–10,000[539] | Asheville's women's march began at Park Square and then moved throughout downtown Asheville. Estimated attendance is between 7,000 and 10,000 people making it the largest assembly in Asheville since 2013.[540] | |
Beaufort | 11[541] | |||
Black Mountain | 600+[15] | The group marched downtown, from the town square to St. James Episcopal Church.[542] | ||
Burnsville[543] | 80[27] | |||
Charlotte | 25,000[544] | Lasting from 10 a.m. to noon, attendance was ten times what had been expected, according to event organizers.[545] Some participants came from surrounding communities, including Concord, Rock Hill and Indian Trail. Attendees included Mayor Jennifer Roberts, U.S. Rep. Alma Adams (D-Charlotte) and state Senator Jeff Jackson (D-Mecklenburg). According to the CMPD, the march was peaceful, with no arrests or disturbances reported.[546] | ||
Greensboro | 3,000–6,000[547] | Triad NC Women's March took place at Government Plaza | ||
Greenville | 200[548] | Pitt County Courthouse | ||
Hillsborough | 200[549] | Orange County Courthouse[550] | ||
Mooresville | 70[551] | Brawley School and Stutts roads – Trump National Golf Club Charlotte | ||
Morganton | 500[552] | People marched down Union Street to the Burke County Courthouse. | ||
New Bern | 600[553] | Union Point Park – parking lot across from the First Presbyterian Church | ||
Ocracoke | 120[554] | School Road – Lighthouse Road | ||
Raleigh | 17,000[555] | Thousands of people demonstrated peacefully at the Raleigh Women's March, starting at City Plaza and heading down Fayetteville and Martin Streets towards Moore Square.[543][556] U.S. Representative David Price also attended. | ||
Saxapahaw | 80[15] | |||
West Jefferson | 250[557] – 300[558] | Hundreds gathered at Back Street Park and marched through downtown West Jefferson.[557] | ||
Wilmington | 1,000–1,500[559] | Intersection of Third and Princess Streets / City Hall | ||
Winston-Salem | 100+[560] | rally planned at the Parkway United Church of Christ[561] | ||
North Dakota | Bismarck | 500[562] | North Dakota State Capitol grounds | |
Fargo | < 3,000[563] | Broadway – NP Avenue | ||
Grand Forks | 304[564] | Archives Coffee House, UND campus | ||
Ohio | Athens | 150–200 | (Jan 20) A rally took place outside Athens County Courthouse prior to a late afternoon march along the streets of uptown Athens; students from Ohio University took part in the event.[565] | |
Chillicothe | 1,000 | Protesters gathered at the Ross County Courthouse and then marched to Yoctangee Park.[566] | ||
Cincinnati | 7,000+[567] | The Women's March started at noon at Washington Park, and after representatives from several civic groups spoke, the march started towards City Hall, and back to Washington Park.[568] | ||
Cleveland | 15,000[569] | Protesters gathered at Public Square and then marched through downtown. | ||
Columbus | 3,000[570] | Protesters gathered at the Ohio State House. | ||
Dayton | 3,000[571] | rally at the Courthouse Square | ||
Kent | 100[572] | Hosted by Kent Interfaith Alliance. | ||
Lakeside | 300[573] | Lakeside Chautauqua | ||
Mount Vernon | 20–30[23] | |||
Springfield | 5[574] | (Jan 20) About five people marched downtown for two hours on Friday afternoon. | ||
Toledo | 450[16] | (Friday, Jan. 20) Several hundred protesters marched across the Martin Luther King Bridge, and arrived at Trinity Episcopal Church for a community celebration.[575] | ||
Troy | 150[576] | County Courthouse Plaza | ||
Wilmington | 70+[577] | Clinton County Courthouse | ||
Wooster | 500[578] – 1,000[579] | A rally was held at the gazebo in Wooster Public Square Historic District.[580][581] | ||
Yellow Springs | 250[582] | At least 250 villagers took to the sidewalks in downtown Yellow Springs. | ||
Oklahoma | Oklahoma City | 12,000+[583] | Demonstrations were held in front of the Oklahoma State Capitol. | |
Tulsa | 1,000 | A rally was held at the John Hope Franklin Reconciliation Park.[584] | ||
Oregon | Ashland | 8,000[585] | Ashland police estimated 8,000 participants in the Ashland Women's March at Lithia Park.[585][586] | |
Astoria | 1,400–1,600[587] | Hundreds of people met at the public parking lot at 12th & Exchange Streets, then marched along the sidewalks of downtown Astoria (in the rain), with a number of drivers honking their support from the streets.[588] | ||
Bandon | 65[589] | Women's Peace March held Friday, January 20, at Bandon City Hall.[589] | ||
Bend | 5,000[590] | A rally was held at Drake Park followed by a rally through Downtown.[591] | ||
Brookings | 275[592] | Curry County Democratic Headquarters – Fifth Avenue[585] | ||
Burns | 20 | Women's March Harney County; intersection of W. Adams & Egan[585] | ||
Coos Bay | 200[593] | corner of Anderson Avenue and Bayshore Drive | ||
Corvallis | hundreds[594] | Student Experience Center plaza and Central Park – riverfront and Odd Fellows Hall | ||
Eugene | 7,000+[595] | US Federal District Court – 8th Ave through downtown Eugene – WOW Hall.[596] | ||
Florence | 250–350[597] | Class Act Theater[585] | ||
Grants Pass | 300–350[598] | (Sun, Feb 19) Since Grants Pass might have been the largest city in Oregon not to have a women's march in January 2017, organizers of Rogue Indivisible decided to correct that omission by holding a rally at the Boys & Girls Club, a month into the Trump administration. The rally turnout at times "rivaled a church revival".[598] | ||
Halfway | 31 | Main St & E. Record St.[585] | ||
Hood River | 200[599] | Hood River Library | ||
Joseph | 300[600] | March planned at the Joseph city parking lot and down North Lake Street. | ||
Klamath Falls | 200[601] – 300[602] | Marchers began at Klamath County library parking lot, and headed down Klamath Ave to Fifth St and over South Sixth St Bridge before finally arriving at Klamath County Government Building.[601] Numerous motorists along the way honked their support, while others sped past cursing; one particular pickup truck driver repeatedly spewed black diesel fumes over the marchers, a practice known as "rolling coal".[603] | ||
La Grande | 400[604] | Fourth Street and Max Square | ||
McMinnville | 700[605] | Women of Yamhill County March; McMinnville Ballroom[606] | ||
Newport[585] | 1,500[607] | Newport City Hall | ||
Pendleton | 425[608] | March planned at the City Hall and Heritage Station Museum. | ||
Port Orford | 200–300[609] | Battle Rock Park – public library parking lot[592] | ||
Portland | 100,000[610] | The first Women's March on Portland began with a rally near the Morrison Bridge at Tom McCall Waterfront Park. Originally estimated to attract between 20,000 and 30,000 people, the actual turnout became one of the largest public protests in Oregon history, with 100,000 people standing shoulder to shoulder (in the rain). They marched along Southwest Naito Parkway, looping around a 44-block area of downtown Portland, and finished at the Battleship Oregon Memorial.[610] | ||
Salem | 2,000 | Salem Capitol Mall. Governor Kate Brown participated in the march.[611] | ||
Sandy | 200[612][613] | Salmon statue at the Sandy Transit Center, east end – west end intersection of Proctor and Pioneer Blvds[614] | ||
The Dalles | 100[27] | |||
Tillamook | 300[615] | Sue Elmore Park – Highway 101.[585] | ||
Welches | Our Retreat, 1000 Nature Ave[585] | |||
Pennsylvania | Annville | 30[616] | intersection of Routes 422 & 934 – Annville Public Library[617] | |
Beaver | 300[618] | Beaver County Courthouse | ||
Bethlehem | 500[619] | Payrow Plaza | ||
Bloomsburg | 40–60[620] | Dozens gathered downtown at the Bloomsburg Fountain on W Main St; one counter-protester stood on the other side of the street.[621] | ||
Clarion | 100[622] | Fulmer House on the corner of Wood St and Seventh Ave – gazebo in the park[623][624] | ||
Doylestown | 2,000[625] | Organizers began planning 6 days before originally anticipating 300 or less attendees. | ||
East Liberty | 1,800[16] | At least several hundred gathered in East Liberty[626] | ||
Erie | 2,500[627] | Erie County Courthouse – West Perry Square | ||
Harrisburg | 1,100[628] | Protesters marched from Kunkle Plaza to the Pennsylvania State Capitol. | ||
Hollidaysburg | 35[629] | Blair County Courthouse – AFSCME building in Duncansville[630] | ||
Indiana | 100–200[631] | |||
Lancaster | hundreds[632] | Crowd gathered in Penn Square. | ||
Lewisburg | 300[633] | About 300 community members gathered at Hufnagle Park. | ||
Millheim | 50[23] | . | ||
Philadelphia | 50,000[634][635] | The event included an actual march from Logan Square to Eakins Oval, and a rally at Eakins Oval.[636] | ||
Pittsburgh | 25,000[626] | The Women's March on Pittsburgh originally applied for a permit for 400 people. Mayor Bill Peduto estimated more than 25,000 actually turned out, marching through the city to Market Square.[637] | ||
Reading | hundreds[638] | Demonstration in City Park | ||
Riegelsville | 170[639] | Riegelsville Lock in Delaware Canal State Park – Mueller's General Store and Kitchen | ||
Selinsgrove | 120[640] | Demonstration at the Selinsgrove Post Office for the Central Susquehanna Valley Region. | ||
Sharon | 700[641] | People marched from the site of the former Columbia Theatre to the Shenango Valley Community Library | ||
State College | 300–500 | "The rally (at the Allen Street gates) attracted a couple hundred people."[642] | ||
West Chester | 150[643] – 200[644] | Chester County Courthouse. Former West Chester Mayor Carolyn Comitta, recently sworn in as a State Representative, attended the rally. | ||
Puerto Rico | Mayaguez | 24[16] | ||
San Juan[645] | 600[16][646] | Sagrado Corazón Station[647] | ||
Santurce | 70[16] | |||
Vieques | 200[648] – 350[16] | Esperanza Ruta; Malecon – Sun Bay Pavilion[649] | ||
Rhode Island | Block Island | 80[650] | Some 80 Block Island residents circled statue of Rebecca in solidarity with the Women's March movement. | |
Providence | 5,000[651] | The R.I. Women's Solidarity Rally was held on the Rhode Island State House lawn. Governor Gina Raimondo participated.[652] Young people from Classical High School spoke to the crowd. | ||
South Carolina | Beaufort | 50+ | An impromptu meeting dubbed "Cookies and Concerns" occurred at a pavilion in the Henry C. Chambers Waterfront Park where participants had unstructured discussions on current events and issues and were asked to bring cookies to donate to local charities.[653] | |
Charleston | 2,000+[654] | The Charleston Women's March began as a convey from nine parking garages downtown and converged at Brittlebank Park at noon. | ||
Clemson | 500 | The marchers followed a route from the Littlejohn Community Center down State 93 to the Strom Thurmond theater on the Clemson University campus.[655] | ||
Columbia | several thousand[656] | "Stand Up" rally for women's rights and social issues; thousands gathered at the South Carolina State House grounds and marched to the Music Farm.[657] | ||
Greenville | 2,000 | A peaceful rally was held at the Falls Park amphitheater in Greenville from noon until 2 pm. Attendance was estimated at 2,000.[655] | ||
South Dakota | Pierre | 130[658] | Rally in state capital.[659] | |
Rapid City | 1,000[660] | The march started in the morning in the City/School Administration Center parking lot and proceeded through downtown to the Alex Johnson Hotel and through Memorial Park. | ||
Sioux Falls | 3,300[661] | Calvary Episcopal Cathedral – City Hall | ||
Vermillion | 500+ | Participants marched along Main Street to the Courthouse.[662] | ||
Tennessee | Chattanooga | 3,000[663] | Thousands gathered at Coolidge Park, then marched down Frazier Avenue, across the Market Street Bridge and toward the Tennessee Aquarium. | |
Jonesborough | 1,000 | The Tri-Cities' rally was held at the Washington County Courthouse.[664] | ||
Knoxville | 2,000 | An assembly was held in Market Square.[665] | ||
Memphis | 9,000+[666] | Marchers gathered at the Judge D'Army Bailey Courthouse and marched 1.2 miles to the National Civil Rights Museum. | ||
Murfreesboro | event planned at MTSU Student Union Building in the Courtyard Commons (on Thursday, January 19)[667] | |||
Nashville | 15,000+[668] | Participants marched about one mile (1.6 km) through downtown Nashville. The march started at Cumberland Park near Nissan Stadium, crossed the Cumberland River on the John Seigenthaler Pedestrian Bridge, and ended at Public Square.[668] | ||
Oak Ridge | 500[669] | Protest organizers expected about 70 people, but roughly 500 people showed up at the Oak Ridge Unitarian Universalist Church.[670] | ||
Texas | Abilene | 200[671] | Protesters rallied outside of the Abilene City Hall. | |
Alpine | 96[15] | Almost 100 people hiked 1.5 miles up Hancock Hill in the cold, wind and rain. | ||
Amarillo | 500[672] – 700[673] | Protesters marched from Ellwood Park to the Potter County Courthouse and back. | ||
Austin | 40,000[674] – 50,000[675] | The crowd gathered at the Texas State Capitol and marched through the streets of downtown Austin for the Women's March on Austin. The Austin Police Department estimated that the crowd had between 40,000 and 50,000 people, becoming the largest march in Texas history.[676][677] It was initially expected to draw 30,000 protesters or more.[678] The march was endorsed by former Texas State Senator and 2014 Texas gubernatorial candidate Wendy Davis, Texas Representative Senfronia Thompson, and author Lizzie Velasquez, who gave speeches at the State Capital.[677] Austin Mayor Steve Adler[679] and U.S. Representative Lloyd Doggett[680] were also in attendance. Organizations such as Women Rising and Taylor Collective Solutions, Planned Parenthood of Greater Texas, Texas Freedom Network, Progress Texas and Annie's List also endorsed the march.[677] | ||
Beaumont | 200+[681] | Protesters from the Golden Triangle marched for an hour along Calder Street, starting and ending outside Betty Smith Creative Works. | ||
Brownsville | 300+[682][683] | Linear Park, near the federal courthouse[684] | ||
College Station | 50[685] | Dozens marched through the campus of Texas A&M University. | ||
Corpus Christi | 100[686] | A peaceful candlelight protest was held outside the Corpus Christi Federal Courthouse.[687] | ||
Dallas | 3,000[679] – 10,000[688] | Thousands gathered at City Hall[689] and marched through downtown, Deep Ellum and East Dallas to the Communication Workers of America building.[690] Police estimated 3,000 people, and organizers estimated between 7,000[679] and 10,000.[690] | ||
Denton | 2,500[683] | A United Denton organized the Women's March to be held around Denton County Courthouse-on-the-Square Museum. The downtown square was packed by 12:30 p.m.[688] | ||
Eagle Pass | 60+[691] | San Juan Plaza – Eagle Pass Public Library | ||
El Paso | 1,000+[692] | The march ran from Armijo Park in El Segundo Barrio to San Jacinto Plaza in Downtown. El Paso County Judge Veronica Escobar addressed the crowd. | ||
Fort Worth | 5,000[693] – 9,000[694] | The march began at the Tarrant County Courthouse and moved down Main and back up Houston Street.[695] This was a Unity march that organizers say gives voice to people from "every cross-section of culture".[696] | ||
Houston | 22,000[697] | Starting at the Sabine Street Bridge, protesters marched through downtown to Houston City Hall.[698] Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner[699] and Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo[697] spoke out during the event. | ||
Lubbock | 350[683][700] | Protesters gathered on the southwest corner of 19th Street and University, at the Timothy Cole statue.[701] | ||
Marfa[645] | 76[23] | Highland Ave. | ||
Midland | 50[702] – 100[703] | The march was held near Midland Park Mall.[702][704] | ||
Nacogdoches | 200–300[705] | Nacogdoches County Courthouse | ||
San Antonio | 1,500[706] | Protesters gathered at San Antonio's City Hall. | ||
Wichita Falls | 150[707] – 200[708] | Protesters marched two miles along Midwestern Parkway, from Sikes Lake to Kemp Boulevard.[707] | ||
Utah | Bluff | 48[27] | event planned at Bluff City Park[709] | |
Kanab | nearly 200[710] | People met at the parking lot of Kanab City Hall[711] and marched downtown through snow and cold temperatures. | ||
Logan | 50[712] | Cache County Courthouse | ||
Moab | 250–300[713] | People biked and marched down 100 West. | ||
Ogden | 300[714] | Union Station – Ogden City Municipal Building, Washington Boulevard | ||
Park City | 8,000[715] | Celebrities protested at the Sundance Film Festival against Trump and for women's rights. One of the messages was "Love Trumps Hate". Celebrities in attendance included Charlize Theron, Kristen Stewart, John Legend, Kevin Bacon, Chelsea Handler, and Benjamin Bratt.[237] It was supported by Justice Party, Planned Parenthood Association of Utah, Equality Now, Sentry Financial, and other organizations.[716] | ||
Saint George | 1,400[717] | Southern Utah is largely conservative and anything more than a token protest of a few hundred was not expected,[718] but over 1,000 protesters showed up. | ||
Salt Lake City | 7,000–11,000 | The Utah State Capitol Building was the destination of two women's marches following President Trump's inauguration. On Friday, Jan 20, hours after he was sworn in, about 1,000 people gathered in front of the Wallace Bennett Federal Building and headed to the Capitol Complex by way of South Temple.[719] Three days later, on Monday afternoon, Jan 23 (the first day of the 2017 state legislative session), more than 10,000 gathered at City Creek Park and marched up State Street in snow and ice;[720] police estimated at least 6,000 made their way into the building (exceeding its fire code capacity of 5,000).[721] | ||
Sandy | 175[16] | |||
Vermont | Bennington | 100[27] | ||
Brattleboro | 250+[722] | A noontime vigil was held at Pliny Park. | ||
Craftsbury | 15[23] | |||
Killington | 51–112 | event planned: a ski-march down the slopes of Killington[723] | ||
Manchester | 50[724] | Main Street-Depot Street roundabout | ||
Montpelier | 20,000[523] | Montpelier High School – Vermont State House; US Senator Bernie Sanders attended the event.[725] | ||
St. Johnsbury | 60[23] | |||
Virgin Islands | St. Croix | 500+[726] | Sunday Market Square – down King Street to the bandstand at the Christiansted National Park lawn near the old slave market.[726] | |
St. John | 200[726] | Freedom Statue, Cruz Bay[727] | ||
St. Thomas | 300[726] | Yacht Haven Grande – Frenchtown post office[728] | ||
Virginia | Alexandria | 17[420] | ||
Arlington | 200[16] | |||
Charlottesville | 2,000[16] | "Thousands" rallied at the Ix Art Park.[729] | ||
Floyd | 200[730][731] | Dogtown Roadhouse – Floyd Courthouse | ||
Norfolk | 2,800[732] | Two groups – one in front of the Chrysler Museum of Art (2,000 people), the other on Granby Street (800 people) – marched separately with similar messages. Both groups eventually joined up to complete the march together.[732] | ||
Onley | 50–70[733] | Rte 13, in front of Four Corner Plaza[734] | ||
Richmond | 2,000+[735] | A sea of people gathered at the foot of the monument to Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee, for the March on Monument Avenue to the Boulevard. State Sen. Jennifer McClellan addressed the crowd at the end of the march. | ||
Roanoke | 4,000[736] | Elmwood Park; the crowd size was initially reported to be between 2,500 and 3,000,[737] but later estimated to have reached the park's maximum capacity of 4,000. | ||
Staunton | 100[738] | Augusta County Circuit Courthouse | ||
Williamsburg | 700–1,000[739] | Hundreds of residents from the greater Williamsburg area (far exceeding organizers' expectation of 50) took to marching on Duke of Gloucester Street. | ||
Winchester | 700–1,300[740] | corner of Piccadilly and Braddock streets – Loudoun Street Mall | ||
Woodstock | 400[741] | old courthouse in Woodstock | ||
Washington | Anacortes | 1,200[742] | Hundreds of men and women took to the sidewalks of downtown Anacortes for a Women's March focused on equality and unity as night fell on Friday's Inauguration Day.[742] | |
Bainbridge Island | 200-350[23] | Eagle Harbor Congregational Church – Winslow Way[743] | ||
Bellingham | 5,000–10,000[744] | City Hall – downtown streets (Commercial, Chestnut & Cornwall) | ||
Cathlamet | 2[745] | |||
Chelan | 450[746] | Chelan Riverwalk Park – Woodin Ave Bridge and Dan Gordon Bridge | ||
Eastsound | 250[747] | Waterfront Park – Main Street to North Beach Road – Village Green stage | ||
Ellensburg | 200[748] | US Post Office & Ellensburg Public Library[749] | ||
Ephrata | 250[750] | Ephrata train station – Basin Street – Grant County Courthouse. The turnout was three times larger than expected.[750] | ||
Forks | 35[751] | |||
Friday Harbor | 1,500[752] | 200 of the marchers were from the neighboring Shaw, Lopez and Orcas Islands.[752] | ||
Issaquah | 56[23] | |||
Kingston | 60[753] | Near the town of Bremerton, dozens rallied alongside Washington State Route 104. | ||
Langley | 1,200–1,300[754] | On Whidbey Island, over a thousand people gathered for a march starting at Langley Middle School's parking lot; stretching beyond the length of Sixth St, it was the largest political demonstration in the city's history, even exceeding its population of 1,135.[754] Meanwhile, over 200 residents took the Clinton ferry and four buses to the march in downtown Seattle.[755] | ||
Longview | 200[756] | Civic Circle | ||
Mount Vernon | several hundred[757] | First Street in downtown, from Skagit Valley Co Op and Tri Dees to Lincoln Theatre/ Kinkaid St.,[758] was packed Saturday afternoon as several hundred men, women and children peacefully marched in support of women's rights. | ||
Ocean Shores | 150[759] | In Grays Harbor County, The North Beach Women's March started at Galway Bay Irish Pub on Point Brown Avenue, with a rally that included Mayor Crystal Dingler, and ended at North Beach Community TV station at 823 Anchor Ave. | ||
Olympia | 10,000[760] | front lawn of the Capitol campus[761] | ||
Port Angeles | 200+[762] | Gathering for Hope: Veterans Memorial Park – Elwha Klallam Heritage Center | ||
Port Townsend | 300[763] | Pope Marine Park – Haller Fountain. Port Townsend, with a population of just under 10,000, was flooded with roughly 300 protesters Saturday morning for the Womxn's March – an event that organizers thought would draw 40 to 50 people. U.S. Rep. Derek Kilmer spoke at the end of the march. | ||
Richland | 1,000+[764][765] | John Dam Plaza – George Washington Way & Jadwin Avenue. Organizers had originally expected 200 participants. | ||
Seattle | 175,000[766] | The Womxn's March on Seattle march took place from Judkins Park to the Space Needle in Seattle, Washington. Participants filled the entire length of the 3.6-mile (5.8 km) route.[767][768] Sound Transit and King County Metro rerouted many bus routes and added additional Link light rail service in anticipation of disruption to the city's transportation grid.[769] | ||
Sequim | 450+ | At daylight, a large crowd (350–500 people) marched with signs in Sequim.[770] Later that evening, over 100 people held a candlelight ceremony at the southeast corner of Sequim Avenue and Washington Street at 1st Security Bank Park.[771] | ||
Spokane | 8,000[772] | Spokane/North Idaho Women's March began with an indoor rally at Spokane Convention Center; its capacity of 6,200 meant thousands more left standing outside (organizers had initially expected between 150 and 200 people). Actor & Spokane native Julia Sweeney addressed the indoor crowd. The subsequent march commenced along Spokane Falls Boulevard, and around the Davenport Grand Hotel.[772] | ||
Twisp | 800[773] | 800 people marched through the town of Twisp, WA (population 950)[15] | ||
Union | 40+[774] | 310 E Dalby Rd, The Square[775] | ||
Vancouver | 150[776] | Vancouver waterfront | ||
Vashon | 253[777] | A last-minute planned march to the Village Green on Vashon Island attracted as many as "253 people and 22 dogs."[777] | ||
Walla Walla | 2,000[764] – 2,400[765] | First Congregational Church parking lot – Alder Street, Fourth Avenue, Main Street and Palouse Street[778] | ||
Wenatchee | < 2,000[779] | community center parking lot – Chelan Ave | ||
Yakima | 700–1,000 | The marchers went from City Hall to a Unitarian Universalist church.[780] | ||
West Virginia | Charleston | 3,000[781] | Organizers of the Women's March on West Virginia counted 2,800 people who marched around the Capitol complex following the demonstration, though hundreds more had stayed behind to sing and dance on the steps. | |
Davis | 12[27] | |||
Fairmont | 100[782] | Fairmont Senior High School | ||
Romney | 30–50[23] | |||
Wisconsin | Appleton | 3 | Two women in town to audition at Lawrence University joined with a solitary demonstrator at Houdini Plaza.[783] | |
Bayfield | 400+[784] | Gwaaba'amaw Women's March began at the Apostle Island National Lakeshore Information Center | ||
Eau Claire | 250+[785] | Water Street – Phoenix Park | ||
Fort Atkinson | 200+[786] | Main Street bridge[787] | ||
Green Bay | 200 | Protesters marched over the Ray Nitschke Memorial Bridge.[788] | ||
Hayward | 80 | Women, men and children marched up Main Street and then gathered in front of the Sawyer County Courthouse for speeches. | ||
Hillsboro | 40+ | More than 40 women, men and children marched in Hillsboro (population 1,400).[789] | ||
La Crosse | 76–100[790] | Protesters met under the clock tower at UWL and then marched down State Street to the downtown area.[791] | ||
Madison | 75,000–100,000[792] | The protest occurred around the Wisconsin State Capitol and along State Street in Madison.[792] | ||
Menomonie | 400+[793] | University of Wisconsin-Stout Clocktower Plaza – intersection of Broadway Street and Crescent Street – Stout footbridge – Menomonie Public Library | ||
Milwaukee | 1,000 | Around 1,000 gathered for a march through Milwaukee that ended at a local brewery.[794] | ||
Minocqua | 300+[795] | Calvary Lutheran Church – Torpy Park | ||
Plymouth | 200[796] | Veterans Memorial Park | ||
Sheboygan | 300[796] | Fountain Park | ||
Wausau | 200+[797] | A supportive march was held at the 400 Block in rainy weather.[798] | ||
Wyoming | Casper | 300[799] – 1,000[800] | From Beech St. Splashpad to the Lyric Theater, hundreds marched through downtown Casper, significantly more than the organizers expectations. | |
Cheyenne | 1,500–2,000[801] | Wyoming Supreme Court[802] | ||
Cody | 500[803] | The Women and Allies March of Park County assembled in City Park.[804] | ||
Jackson Hole | 1,000+[280] | More than 500 gathered at the Town Square and twice that number – an estimated more than 1,000 people – participated in the 10-block march. | ||
Lander[802] | 350[280] | 400 Baldwin Creek Road[805] | ||
Laramie | 60[806] | Laramie Plains Civic Center (caravan for Cheyenne march)[807] | ||
Pinedale[802] | 150[280] | |||
Rock Springs[808] | 105[27] | (Jan 22) Sweetwater Memorial Hospital parking lot – Western Wyoming Community College[809] |
Worldwide
[edit]Notes
[edit]References
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- ^ Amber Jamieson; Nicola Slawson; Nadia Khomami (January 21, 2017). "Women's March events take place in Washington and around the world – as it happened". The Guardian. Retrieved January 20, 2023.
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- ^ "Not a Single Arrest in Massive D.C. Women's March". NBC News. January 22, 2017. Retrieved March 16, 2017.
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we had a good crowd show up
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- ^ Women's MARCH Sedona (January 21, 2017). "Sedona Women's March Day – January 21, 2017 (photo)". Facebook. Retrieved March 11, 2021.
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