Talk:March for Our Lives/table

Latest comment: 6 years ago by Another Believer


Did you want me to paste the one I am working on from my sandbox? I am in the process of cleared content from the one I made for the Women's March 2018 or is it better to work from scratch? Oceanflynn (talk) 17:25, 24 March 2018 (UTC)Reply

It's up to you.- MrX 🖋 18:02, 24 March 2018 (UTC)Reply

I have copied the table I used for the List of 2018 Women's March locations. I cleared cell contents. Is there an easy way to hide entries until the content has citations?Oceanflynn (talk) 19:34, 24 March 2018 (UTC)Reply

How can we Wikify this so it can be in the main article space so others can contribute?

Move the content to List of March for Our Lives locations? ---Another Believer (Talk) 21:24, 24 March 2018 (UTC)Reply
@Another Believer: Are you proposing that we create an article for the locations?- MrX 🖋 21:39, 24 March 2018 (UTC)Reply
We might consider following the March for Science and List of March for Science locations format? ---Another Believer (Talk) 22:55, 24 March 2018 (UTC)Reply
Extended content


This is a potential list of locations where there may have been events related to March For Our Lives on March 24, 2018.

United States

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Listed below are locations where there may have been rallies or marches in the U.S. in support of the March For Our Lives. Citations are needed for each entry.

Photo Approximate attendance Notes
100s of thousands[1] In Washington, D.C. there was a massive turnout for the "standing-room-only rally" on Pennsylvania Avenue.[2] Speakers included Marjory Stoneman Douglas students Cameron Kasky and David Hogg.[2]
State Date Cities Photo Approximate attendance Notes
 Alabama March 24 Birmingham In Alabama,
Dothan
Huntsville
Mentone
Mobile
 Alaska Adak
Anchorage In Anchorage, Alaska
Bethel
Craig
Cordova
Fairbanks data-sort-value=""
Gustavus data-sort-value=""
Haines
Homer
Juneau
Ketchikan
Kodiak
Kotzebue
Moose Pass
Nome
Palmer
Seldovia
Seward
Sitka
Skagway
Soldotna
Talkeetna
Unalakleet
Utqiagvik (Barrow)
Valdez
 Arizona Flagstaff data-sort-value=""
Green Valley
Phoenix
Prescott
Tucson
Yuma
Other Arizona towns
 Arkansas Bentonville
Fayetteville
Little Rock
 California Albany
Avalon
Berkeley
Beverly Hills
Bishop
Borrego Springs
Burbank
Chico
Compton
El Centro
Encinitas
Eureka
Fairfax
Fort Bragg
Fresno
Gualala
Hemet
Kings Beach
Laguna Beach
Laytonville
Long Beach
Lompoc
Los Angeles data-sort-value=""
Modesto
Monterey Bay
Mt. Shasta
Napa
Nevada City
Oakhurst
Oakland
Ontario
Pacifica
Palm Desert
Palmdale
Pasadena
Redding
Redondo Beach
Redwood City
Ridgecrest
Riverside
Sacramento
San Bernardino
San Clemente
San Diego
San Francisco
San Jose
San Luis Obispo
San Marcos
January 20 Santa Ana
Santa Barbara
Santa Cruz
Santa Rosa
Seaside
Sonoma
South Lake Tahoe
Ukiah
Vallejo
Ventura
Visalia
Walnut Creek
Watsonville
Willits
Yucca Valley
 Colorado Alamosa
Aspen
Broomfield
Carbondale
Colorado Springs
Cortez
Crested Butte
Denver
Durango
Glenwood Springs
Grand Junction
Lafayette
Ridgway
Silverton
Steamboat Springs
City, Colorado
 Connecticut East Haddam
Hartford
New Haven
Old Saybrook
Salisbury
Stamford
 Delaware Lewes
Newark
 Florida Boca Raton
Daytona Beach
Fernandina Beach
Gainesville
Jacksonville
Key West
Melbourne
Miami Beach
Miami
Naples
New Smyrna Beach
Ocala
Orlando
Panama City
Parkland 15,000 There were about 15,000 people attending the Parkland event.[1]
Pensacola
Sarasota
St. Augustine
St. Petersburg
Tallahassee
West Palm Beach
The Villages
Georgia (U.S. state) Georgia Athens data-sort-value=""
Atlanta 30,000 30,000 people marched.[1]
Augusta
Savannah
Statesboro
Zebulon
 Guam Hagåtña
 Hawaii Hilo
Honolulu (Oahu)
Kahului
Kawaihae
Kona
Lihue (Kauai)
 Idaho Boise
Driggs
Idaho Falls
Ketchum
Moscow
Pocatello
Sandpoint
Stanley
 Illinois Carbondale
Champaign-Urbana
Chicago data-sort-value=""
Elgin
Galesburg
Maryville
Peoria
Rockford
Springfield
 Indiana Evansville
Fort Wayne
Indianapolis
Lafayette
Paoli
South Bend
St. Mary of the Woods
Terre Haute
Valparaiso
 Iowa Bettendorf
Decorah
Des Moines
Dubuque
Iowa City
 Kansas Lawrence
Topeka
Wichita
 Kentucky Lexington
Louisville
Murray
Pikeville
 Louisiana Monroe
New Orleans
Shreveport
 Maine Augusta
Brunswick
Eastport
Ellsworth
Gouldsboro
Fort Kent
Kennebunk
Lubec
Monhegan Island
Portland
Sanford
Surry
Tenants Harbor
Vinalhaven
 Maryland Accident
Annapolis
Baltimore
Frederick
Ocean City
St. Mary's City
 Massachusetts Boston
Falmouth
Greenfield
Martha's Vineyard
Nantucket
Northampton
Pittsfield
Provincetown
Wellfleet
Worcester
 Michigan Adrian
Ann Arbor
Brighton
Clare
Detroit Thousands "Fifteen-year-old Brooke Solomon led thousands of demonstrators in a march through the downtown streets of Detroit."[3]
Douglas-Saugatuck
Grand Rapids
Grosse Pointe
Houghton
Kalamazoo
Lansing
Marquette
Midland
Sault Ste Marie
Tecumseh
Traverse City
Ypsilanti
 Minnesota Bemidji
Cambridge
Duluth
Ely
Grand Marais
Longville
Mankato
Minneapolis
Morris
Rochester
St. Cloud
St. Paul
 Mississippi Gulfport
Hattiesburg
Jackson
Oxford
 Missouri Columbia
Kansas City
Springfield
St. Louis
 Montana Billings
Bozeman
Butte
Helena
Missoula
 Nebraska Lincoln
Loup City
Omaha
 Nevada Las Vegas
Reno
Stateline
 New Hampshire Concord
Francestown
Jackson
Keene
Lancaster
Portsmouth
Wilton
 New Jersey Asbury Park
Leonia
Morristown
Mt. Laurel
Pequannock Township/Pompton Plains
Red Bank
Sicklerville
South Orange
Trenton
Westfield
Wyckoff
 New Mexico Albuquerque
Deming
Las Cruces
Santa Fe
 New York Albany
Binghamton
Buffalo
Canton
Cobleskill
Cooperstown
Delhi
Fredonia
Glens Falls
Hudson
Ithaca
Lewis County
New York City 150,000 New York City's rally had 150,000 attendees.[1]
Oneonta
Plattsburgh
Port Jefferson
Port Jervis
Poughkeepsie
Rochester
Rockland 4,000 Rockland County, where a crowd of 400 was anticipated, had 4,000 in attendance, according to WABC.[1]
Sag Harbor
Seneca Falls
Syracuse
Utica
Watertown
Woodstock
 North Carolina Asheville
Black Mountain
Charlotte Students led a massive rally.[4]
Greensboro
Hillsborough
Mooresville
Morganton
New Bern
Raleigh
Wilmington
Winston-Salem
 North Dakota Bismarck
Fargo
Grand Forks
 Ohio Athens
Chillicothe
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Dayton
Kent
Lakeside
Mount Vernon
Toledo
Troy
Wooster
Yellow Springs
 Oklahoma Oklahoma City
Tulsa
 Oregon Ashland
Astoria
Bandon
Bend
Brookings
Burns
Coos Bay
Corvallis
Eugene data-sort-value="
Florence
Halfway
Hood River
Joseph
Klamath Falls
La Grande
McMinnville
Newport
Pendleton
Port Orford
Portland
Salem
Sandy
Tillamook
Welches
 Pennsylvania Beaver
Bethlehem
Bloomsburg
Doylestown
Erie
Harrisburg
Indiana
Lancaster
Lewisburg
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh data-sort-value="30,000"|30,000 30,000 people marched.[1]
Reading
Riegelsville
Selinsgrove
Sharon
State College
West Chester
 Puerto Rico Mayaguez
San Juan
Santurce
Vieques
 Rhode Island Rhode Island
 South Carolina Beaufort
Charleston
Clemson
Columbia
Greenville
 South Dakota Pierre
Rapid City
Sioux Falls
Vermillion
 Tennessee Chattanooga
Jonesborough
Knoxville
Memphis
Murfreesboro
Nashville
Oak Ridge
 Texas Abilene
Alpine
Amarillo
Austin
Beaumont
Brownsville
College Station
Corpus Christi
Dallas
Denton
Eagle Pass
El Paso
Fort Worth
Houston 15,000 Houston reported about 15,000 attendees at their event.[1]
Lubbock
Marfa
Midland
Nacogdoches
San Antonio
Wichita Falls
 Utah Bluff
Kanab
Logan
Moab
Ogden
Park City
Saint George
Salt Lake City 6,000 Six thousand people, mainly students marched for more gun regulations. An hour before their march, five hundred pro-gun marchers also called for safer schools.[5]
 Vermont Brattleboro
Killington
Montpelier
United States Virgin Islands Virgin Islands St. Croix
St. John
St. Thomas
 Virginia Alexandria
Arlington
Charlottesville
Floyd
Norfolk
Onley
Richmond
Roanoke
St. John
Staunton
Williamsburg
Winchester
Woodstock
 Washington Anacortes
Bellingham
Bainbridge Island
Chelan
Eastsound
Ephrata
Forks
Friday Harbor
Issaquah
Kingston
Langley
Longview
Mount Vernon
Ocean Shores
Olympia
Port Angeles
Port Townsend
Richland
January 20 Seattle
Sequim
Spokane
Twisp
Vancouver
Vashon
Walla Walla
Wenatchee
Yakima
 West Virginia Charleston
Fairmont
 Wisconsin Appleton
Bayfield
Eau Claire
Fort Atkinson
Green Bay
Hillsboro
La Crosse
Madison
Marquette
Menomonie
Milwaukee
Plymouth
Sheboygan
Wausau
 Wyoming Casper
Cheyenne
Cody
Jackson Hole
Lander
Pinedale
Rock Springs

Worldwide

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Listed below are marches outside the United States in support of the 2018 March for Our Lives.

Country Date Locations Photo Approximate attendance Notes
 Antarctica McMurdo Station
Paradise Bay data-sort-value=""
 Argentina Buenos Aires
 Australia Sydney data-sort-value=""
Canberra
Melbourne
 Austria Vienna
 Belgium Brussels
 Brazil Brasília
 Canada Calgary
Edmonton
Montreal
Ottawa
Toronto
Vancouver
Victoria
 Chile Santiago
 Colombia Bogotá
 Costa Rica San José
 Croatia Zagreb
 Czech Republic Prague
 Denmark Copenhagen
 Finland Helsinki
 France Auvillar
Bordeaux
Montpellier
Nice
Paris
Strasbourg
Toulouse
Marseille
 Georgia Tbilisi
 Germany Berlin
Bonn
Düsseldorf
Frankfurt am Main
Hamburg
Heidelberg
Munich
 Ghana Accra >
 Greece Athens
 Hungary Budapest
 Hong Kong Hong Kong
 Iceland Reykjavik
 India Delhi Delhi, Mumbai, Hyderabad, Nagpur, Ranchi and Thrissur
Mumbai
Hyderabad
Nagpur
Ranchi
Thrissur
 Indonesia Yogyakarta
Jakarta
 Iraq Erbil
 Ireland Galway
Dublin
 Israel Tel Aviv
 Italy Florence
Rome
 Japan Tokyo
 Jordan Amman
 Kenya Nairobi
 Kosovo Pristina
 Latvia Riga
 Lebanon Beirut
 Lithuania Vilnius
 Macau Macau
 Malawi Lilongwe
 Mexico Mexico City
 Myanmar (Burma) Yangon (Rangoon)
 Netherlands Amsterdam
The Hague
 New Zealand Auckland
Dunedin
Wellington
 Nigeria Jos
 Norway Oslo
 Peru Lima
 Philippines Manila
 Poland Gdańsk
Kraków
Warsaw
 Portugal Lisbon, Porto
 Serbia Belgrade
 South Africa Cape Town
Durban
 South Korea Seoul
 Spain Barcelona
Granada
Madrid
 Sweden Stockholm
Åre
  Switzerland Geneva
 Tanzania Dar es Salaam
 Thailand Bangkok
 Togo Lomé
 United Kingdom Bristol
Edinburgh
Lancaster
Leeds
Liverpool
J London
Manchester
Southampton
York

Outside the United States

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Canada

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France

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Germany

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Italy

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Togo

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Locations

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References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Shapiro, Emily (March 24, 2018). "March for Our Lives recap: Shooting survivors lead passionate pleas to end gun violence". ABC News. Retrieved March 24, 2018.
  2. ^ a b Sanchez, Ray (March 24, 2018). "Students rally in March for Our Lives events in Washington and across US". CNN. Retrieved March 24, 2018.
  3. ^ "The Latest: 6 minutes of silence at powerful anti-gun rally". Charlotte Observer via AP. Washington. March 24, 2018. Retrieved March 24, 2018.
  4. ^ HElms, Ann Doss; Smith, Lavendrick. "Charlotte students lead massive March For Our Lives rally against gun violence". Charlotte Observer. Charlotte, North Carolina.
  5. ^ "Thousands rally, march in Utah for gun control". Charlotte Observer. Salt Lake City. March 24, 2018. Retrieved March 24, 2018.