Ribbon Cut

Pride Fest celebrates fifth anniversary with ribbon cut

[June 09, 2025] 

On Saturday evening the fifth annual Pride Fest in Lincoln was celebrated with a ribbon cut held at the kick off for the evening.

Those behind the ribbon included Pride Board members Kelsie Edwards, Tristin Karrick, Taylor Lyon, Sam Downs, and Lisa Cotton. Joining them was Lincoln Mayor Tracy Welch.

The event was held on the stage area located at the corner of Kickapoo and Pulaski Streets on the Logan County Courthouse Square.

The first to speak for the ribbon cut was board vice-president Tristin Karrick. He welcomed everyone to the fifth annual Pride Fest and went on to say. “It is so amazing to see all these beautiful faces on a beautiful day. I want to say thank you for the last five years. This all happened because somebody said this would never happen in Logan County.” He said that was why he was there, why everyone was there, and that alone was a reason to celebrate. “We’re here to have fun, and support some of our small businesses.” Karrick also noted that this is the ten year anniversary of the landmark case Obergefell v. Hodges that permitted same sex marriages and ultimately set off the Pride movement for LGBTQ citizens.

Second to speak was Mayor Welch. He said “this is really everybody’s festival but it is your festival.” He went on to congratulate the group on their five years and said that as mayor it was very important to him to make sure that everyone in the community is represented and “I think that is what this festival displays, that like minded people can come together and celebrated things that are important to them and that they care about.”



Board president Kelsie Edwards was the final person to address the crowd that had gathered.

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She said it was a day “filled with color, courage and community.” She thanked Mayor Welch and Lincoln Daily News for being part of the opening ceremony for year five. She said, as had already been stated, the celebration happened for the first time because people said it was something that would never happen in Logan County. She said, “it made us want to make it happen.” She said that the Pride celebration was a statement of “visibility, a reminder of how far we have come, and a call to continue the journey toward equality. It is a time to recognize and honor those who have paved the way, and to uplift those who are fighting to be seen and to remind every person here you are valued and never alone.”

Edwards continued, “In smaller towns and rural areas it sometimes feels isolating, resources are limited, and acceptance takes longer to grow. That is why events like this matter so much.”

She went on to thank local leaders, schools, and community members who have shown support for the LGBTQ community.



After that, it was time for the posed picture and the ribbon cut. The ribbon was snipped by Edwards along with fellow board member Taylor Lyon amidst a large volume of cheers from the spectator.

The event then officially began, with vendors set up on Pulaski and Kickapoo Streets along with contests and entertainment throughout the evening.

[Nila Smith]

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