New Exhibit: “Pirate Pride: History of LGBTQ+ Activism in Greenville and East Carolina University”
A new exhibit entitled “Pirate Pride: History of LGBTQ+ Activism in Greenville and East Carolina University” is currently on display on the 3rd floor of Joyner Library. Curated by University Archives Graduate Assistant Zachary Dale, the exhibit highlights the previously hidden history of gay rights advocacy on ECU’s and in the Greenville community that spans nearly fifty years. From the first grassroots organizations to the Dr. Jesse R. Peel LGBTQ Center, “Pirate Pride” details the incredible lengths that advocates went to in order to find security and acceptance in eastern North Carolina.
The exhibit showcases artifacts that focus primarily on documenting the major organizations that developed in Greenville and ECU from 1975 to 2020. These items include a Fountainhead newspaper article from 1976, a two-page feature in the Buccaneer yearbook from 1979, photographs of ECU’s first gay student organization, the first constitution of the current campus group, and foundational records for the campus LGBTQ+ center.
The exhibit also showcases materials from the five gay pride festivals that were held in Greenville between 1995 and 1999. Most notably, a letter of congratulations from ECU alumna Sandra Bullock to organizers of the first festival has been reproduced for display.
“Pirate Pride: History of LGBTQ+ Activism in Greenville and East Carolina University” will be on display North Carolina Collection on the 3rd floor of Joyner Library until May, 2020. Zachary Dale will be giving a talk on his research and the exhibit on May 6, 2020 at 4:30 pm in Faulkner Gallery.