State | Date | Cities | Photo | Approximate attendance | Notes |
| Jan. 20 | Washington, D.C. | | 10,000+ | In Washington, D.C., thousands gathered at the Reflecting Pool at the Lincoln Memorial and marched to the White House. The crowd was smaller than the 2017 rally, which according to WUSA9 had almost 500,000 participants. Just ahead of the start of the rally, over 12,000 people had RSVP’d they were attending on the event's Facebook page, with another 21,000 stating they were interested. U.S. Sen Kirsten Gillibrand, one of Trump's targets for Twitter attacks, addressed the crowd: "It is women who are holding our democracy together in these dangerous times." Also speaking, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, Sen. Tim Kaine, Sen Richard Blumenthal, DNC Chair Tom Perez, & Toni Van Pelt, president of the National Organization for Women. |
| Jan. 20 & 22 | Birmingham | | ~58 | "Celebration of Women" event scheduled from 1-4 p.m. at Rogue Tavern; Roe v Wade: 45 Years of Choice; event planned at The J Clyde |
| | Dothan | | | "Power to the Polls Wiregrass!" Event held at KBC on Foster for voter registration |
| | Huntsville | | 200+ | A march was held at Big Springs Park |
| | Mentone | | 60+ | Plowshares Bistro & Artisan Market - Mentone Arts and Cultural Center |
| | Mobile | | few hundred | The South Alabama Women's March Anniversary Event took place at the Public Safety Memorial Park. Participants were particularly fired up after the 2017 special US Senate election of Doug Jones. Among the six speakers at the rally were state Rep. Barbara Drummond, the only current elected official, and Tabitha Isner, a Democratic contender for Alabama's 2nd congressional district, currently held by Republican Rep. Martha Roby. |
| | Montgomery | | thousands | Court Square fountain, Dexter Ave - Alabama State Capitol; event hosted by Southern Poverty Law Center |
| Jan. 21 | Tuscaloosa | | | Tuscaloosa Moms Demand Action; Training Room, The Gateway at Alberta |
| | Anchorage | | 3,000 | In Anchorage, 3,000 people marched to empower women and to protest President Donald Trump's policies. The Alaska March for Women 2018 began at the Delaney Park Strip and continued along 9th Avenue. |
| | Bethel | | several dozen | |
| | Cordova | | 87 | About 87 men, women and children gathered in the center of Main Street for the Women's March in Cordova. |
| | Fairbanks | | 400 | Under the theme of "Power to the Polls", speakers opposed oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and gerrymandered legislative districts. Signs included, "love Trumps hate". |
| | Gustavus | | 90 | Gustavus Airport. About 90 of the community's 400 residents turned out for the march |
| | Homer | | 650-700 | Pioneer Avenue |
| | Juneau | | 1,030+ | in front of State Capitol - Marine Park. |
| | Ketchikan | | 150 | Event planned at 131 Front Street |
| | Kodiak | | 140 | Kodiak High School |
| | Kotzebue | | | Above the Arctic Circle, with a temperature of -51, a "couple people got frostbite" during the Women's March in Kotzebue. |
| | Nome | | 40 | people in fur-lined parkas marched down Front Street |
| | Petersburg | | 100+ | Petersburg's Women March, a.k.a. March for Love |
| | Seldovia | | 33 | Marchers walked on a clear cold day. |
| | Seward | | 65 | About 65 women, men, children, and about 10 sled dogs participated in the march organized by Suzi Towsley and Fey Herold. |
| | Sitka | | 300 | Organizer Kathy Ingallinera thanked everyone for coming out |
| | Soldotna | | 75 | Soldotna Public Library, Kenai Spur Highway |
| Jan. 21 | Unalaska | | 55 | Eagle's View Elementary School |
| | Valdez | | | Event planned at corner of Fairbanks & Hazelet |
| | Wrangell | | 15 | 5-minute march through the small island of Wrangell, AK |
| Jan. 21 | Ajo | | 11 | Event planned at Ajo Plaza in Ajo Plaza |
| | Casa Grande | | ~100 | Pinal County Women's March, Peart Park. Former congresswoman Gabby Giffords & her husband Mark Kelly spoke at the event. US Rep. Tom O'Halleran was also scheduled to speak but got held back by the government shutdown. |
| | Flagstaff | | 1,000+ | Flagstaff City Hall; hundreds marched through snow. |
| | Green Valley | | 54 | Alliance4Action Women's March Rally; corner of Esperanza & La Canada |
| | Nogales | | 100+ | International Street |
| | Payson | | | Event planned at 513 S. Beeline Highway |
| Jan. 21 | Phoenix | | 25,000 | Arizona State Capitol; Arizona Capitol Museum. The Phoenix march came one day after 4,500 people gathered at the Capitol for the Arizona for Life March and Rally. |
| | Prescott | | 1,100 - 1,400 | Yavapai County Courthouse |
| | Sedona | | 500 | Creative Gateways Gallery - Vino di Sedona; hundreds marched through rain. |
| | Tucson | | 100 | Instead of a march, a candlelight vigil was held in Amory Park |
| | Fayetteville | | 1,000 - 3,000 | Fayetteville Town Center - Fayetteville Library |
| | Little Rock | | hundreds | The Arkansas Times reported big crowds at the State Capitol Building in Little Rock. |
| | Alameda | | | event planned at Park St & Santa Clara Ave |
| | Avalon | | 45-47 | Wrigley Stage |
| | Bakersfield | | 3,000 | The first Kern County Women's March started and ended at Mill Creek Park off of 21st Street |
| | Bishop | | 173 | Eastern Sierra Women's March; event planned at Bishop City Park |
| | Burbank | | 293 | event planned at Chandler Bikeway |
| | Carpinteria | | 400 | Seal Plaza, Linden Ave - Carpinteria State Beach; the closure of a major traffic artery along the California coast did not stop the marchers from publicly promoting gender equality |
| | Chico | | 5,000 | Downtown Chico Plaza |
| | Crescent City | | 250-400 | Crescent Elk Middle School |
| | Eureka | | 4,300 - 5,000 | Madaket Plaza at the top of C Street Market Square - boardwalk march to F Street Plaza |
| | Fairfax | | 100+ | Fairfax parkade - San Anselmo hub |
| | Fort Bragg | | 1,000+ | Women's March Mendocino Coast 2018 at Bainbridge Park ; Mayor Lindy Peters was present. |
| | Fresno | | thousands | River Park Shopping Center; Nees and Blackstone |
| | Gualala | | | event planned at Gualala Hotel Parking Lot |
| | Hemet | | | Democratic Headquarters |
| | Idyllwild | | 100+ | Idyllwild Monument |
| | Jenner | | | event planned at Timber Cove Landing |
| | Kings Beach | | 750 | outdoor plaza of North Tahoe Event Center |
| | Los Angeles | | 600,000 | According to Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, about 600,000 marched in Los Angeles, from Pershing Square to Grand Park and the City Hall on the morning of January 20, calling for equal rights for women in a rally that reflected the rise of the #MeToo and #TimesUp" movements. From 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., they marched to end violence, and to protect the rights of women, workers, people with disabilities, immigrants, indigenous peoples, and environmental and civil rights. |
| | Modesto | | 1,200 | Corner of Briggsmore and McHenry; attendance up from about 1,000 last year. People marched down McHenry Ave to a rally at Graceada Park |
| | Monterey Bay | | 3,000 | CSU Monterey Bay at Seaside |
| | Napa | | 3,000 - 4,000 | An estimated 3000 to 4000 people marched from city hall to the Napa Valley Expo, for a rally addressed by local elected officials and a DACA recipient. |
| | Nevada City | | 200 | Broad Street overpass |
| | Oakland | | 40,000 - 50,000 | After a rally at Lake Merritt Amphitheater, a peaceful march in downtown Oakland started at 14th Street & Lake Merritt and continued to Frank H. Ogawa Plaza. Some women wore the red robes and headdresses from The Handmaid's Tale. |
| | Oakhurst | | 200+ | corner of Highway 41 and Road 426 |
| | Pacifica | | 1,000 | march along Pacifica Coast Highway, starting at Linda Mar Beach |
| | Palm Springs | | 1,000+ | Frances Stevens Park. S Palm Canyon Drive - Wellwood Library. Recently elected Palm Springs Councilwoman Lisa Middleton, the first transgender city representative in California, emceed the event. |
| | Quincy | | 11 | Plumas County Court House |
| Jan. 21 | Redding | | 700+ | Civic Center Plaza - Redding City Hall & back |
| | Redondo Beach | | 1,000 - 1,500 | In front of Ruby's Diner; organized by Progressive Parents South Bay |
| | Ridgecrest | | 100+ | Petroglyph Park; organized by Ridgecrest United |
| | Riverside | | 3,000 - 6,000 | Historic Riverside Courthouse; 2018 Inland Empire Women's March. Riverside police said that about 3,000 were there; research physicist Ann Heinson of Rise Up California said her analysis showed about 6,000 |
| | Sacramento | | 36,000 | Southside Park; the numbers rose well about last year's attendance of 20,000 |
| | San Diego | | 37,000 | Waterfront Park. Because of its proximity to the Mexico – United States border, San Diego is a "binational", multicultural city. 2018 Women's March director Monica Boyle acknowledged the unseated land of the Kumeyaay Nation, where the rally took place. Though San Diego Police Department officials estimated about 37,000 people attended today's march, Boyle said the crowd at this year's march was even bigger than last year's. |
| | San Francisco | | 80,000 | noon rally at the Civic Center Plaza, followed by a march down Market Street to the Embarcadero at 2pm. Speakers included Aimee Allison, president of Democracy in Color; Brittany Packnett, Ferguson, MO activist; San Francisco supervisors Hillary Ronen & Sandra Lee Fewer |
| | San Jose | | 20,000 | San Jose City Hall. Organizers of the San Jose march focused on encouraging people to become active in politics and to register to vote. |
| | San Luis Obispo | | 4,000 | Mission Plaza |
| | San Marcos | | 3,000 - 4,000 | Palomar College |
| | Santa Ana | | 20,000 | Six Native American women wearing traditional clothing led the Orange County Women's March from Flower Street and Civic Center Drive up Main Street. Themes of the march included "MeToo" and "TimesUp" but also focused on issues, such as "immigrant, worker and disability rights, and the environment." Some demonstrators in Santa Ana danced to songs by Cyndi Lauper and Beyoncé and chanted: "When we fight we win!" |
| | Santa Barbara | | 3,500 | A rally was held at De La Guerra Plaza, but the march was postponed to International Women's Day as all local emergency personnel had been strained due to a recent mudslide in Montecito. |
| | Santa Cruz | | 30,000+ | Locust St & Pacific Ave - Louden Nelson Community Center. |
| | Santa Rosa | | 2,000+ | Old Courthouse Square |
| | Sebastopol | | several hundred | Sebastopol Town Plaza |
| | Sonoma | | 2,000+ | Sonoma Plaza |
| | South Lake Tahoe | | 400 | Tahoe Truckee Women's March; 400 people marched along U.S. 50 from Stateline, NV to Lakeview Commons. South Lake Tahoe Mayor Wendy David spoke to the marchers. |
| | Susanville | | | museum 95 N. Weatherlow |
| | Ukiah | | hundreds | Alex Thomas Plaza |
| | Vallejo | | 140 | event in Vallejo, CA |
| | Ventura | | 1,500 | "Ventura County Rising" event planned at Plaza Park |
| | Visalia | | hundreds | College of the Sequoias - march along Mooney Blvd. As of Saturday morning, more than 900 people said they were interested in attending the event posted on Facebook. |
| | Walnut Creek | | 10,000+ | Civic Park |
| | Aspen | | | Women's Ski & March on Aspen Mountain & Paepcke Park |
| | Broomfield | | 400 | Broomfield Library Amphitheater |
| | Canon City | | 4 | event planned at 628 Main St |
| | Carbondale | | 500 | The Goat & Kitchen Bar - Highway 133 |
| Jan. 21 | Colorado Springs | | 1,000+ | Demonstrators gathered in snow and frigid temperatures at All Souls Unitarian Universalist Church, and marched south on Tejon St, pausing at City Hall and Acacia Park |
| | Cortez | | 300+ | Cortez City Park; organized by the Montezuma Alliance for Unity. Cortez Mayor Karen Sheek spoke at the rally. |
| | Creede | | 1 | Creede Women's March 2018 planned; Kip's – Arp's |
| Jan. 21 | Crested Butte | | 18 | Women's Ski March planned at Red Lady Express / 4-Way Stop, Elk Street; hosted by Gunnison Valley Democrats |
| | Denver | | 50,000+ | Civic Center Park - People of "all ages, races and genders" marched in solidarity to support women's equality, racial minorities, LGBTQ, climate science, health care and heading to the polls. This year, organizers in their city permit application anticipated as many as 200,000 participants, but, according to a crowd estimation tool, the march drew closer to 50,000. |
| | Durango | | 600+ | march along Main Ave from Rotary Park to the Durango Public Library |
| | Grand Junction | | thousands | Lincoln Park - Old Mesa County Courthouse. There were so many people that the Grand Junction Police Department had to shut down the street outside of City Hall. |
| | Greeley | | 150 | Weld County Courthouse - gazebo at Lincoln Park. About 150 people showed up to Greeley's first women's march Saturday morning in downtown Greeley. |
| | Gunnison | | | Event planned at Legion Park |
| | Pueblo | | 1,000 | Old Pueblo Courthouse. 500–1,000 people were expected |
| | Salida | | 100+ | Honk and Wave visibility event planned at Centennial Park ; march to Soulcraft |
| Jan. 21 | Steamboat Springs | | 500 | Bud Werner Memorial Library - Routt County Courthouse lawn |
| | Telluride | | 70-80 | march down Colorado Ave |
| | Trinidad | | | event planned at Santa Fe Trail & Main Street |
| | Vail | | | Event planned at Vail Village Transportation Center |
| | East Haddam | | 400+ | Two Wrasslin' Cats; Together We Rise CT |
| | Hartford | | 10,000+ | The Hartford march drew about 10,000 participants. Lt. Gov Nancy Wyman, Rep Elizabeth Esty & Hartford Mayor Luke Bronin addressed the rally. |
| | Mystic | | 50-75 | Rise Up Mystic held a rally near the John Kelley Statue |
| | Salisbury | | 250 | Salisbury Green - Town Hall |
| Jan. 21 | Lewes | | 200+ | Women's March Sussex planned for 1 p.m. at the Lewes Public Library |
| | Newark | | hundreds | Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Newark |
| Jan. 21 | Bokeelia | | | Event planned at Fritts Park, Bokeelia |
| Jan. 20 & 21 | Gainesville | | 500+ | 50 people gathered near the Eternal Flame monument and walked across the midtown pedestrian bridge 450 people met on Bo Diddley Community Plaza, and marched down West University Ave to Southwest 13th St and back. |
| Jan. 21 | Jacksonville | | 1,000 | Women's March Day of Action, Jacksonville Landing |
| | Melbourne | | thousands | Eau Gallie Causeway; Brevard Women's March |
| Jan. 21 | Miami | | 1,000 - 2,500 | Mana Wynwood Convention Center; Carrie Feit, president of Women's March Miami, said the decision to forgo marching and just hold a rally is encapsulated in Women's March Florida 2018 slogan: “In 2017 we marched! In 2018 we act!” Speakers included two Democratic candidates for governor: Tallahassee Mayor Andrew Gillum and former US Rep Gwen Graham. US Rep Lois Frankel also spoke. |
| | Naples | | 1,300 | Cambier Park |
| Jan. 21 | Orlando | | 10,000 | Lake Eola Park - Walt Disney Amphitheater. The rally was a part of Women's March Florida's statewide “Day of Action,” which also gathered donations for hurricane relief for Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands and the Florida Keys. A handful of men from the Proud Boys showed up to clash with the protesters, and were quickly escorted out by Orlando police. State Rep. Amy Mercado addressed the crowd, as did Sheena Meade, a former Florida House candidate and speaker from Orlando's first women's march, who lamented, on both occasions, the lack of diversity in an audience of mostly white women. |
| | Panama City | | hundreds | McKenzie Park |
| | Pensacola | | few hundred | A community rally was organized at Plaza De Luna in downtown Pensacola Saturday to walk in solidarity with the Women's March on Washington. Organizers criticized the idea of "pussyhats" over perceptions that it excluded transgender women and women of color. |
| Jan. 20 & 21 | Sarasota | | 10,000 | At least 10,000 people gathered at the Unconditional Surrender Statue. A second protest march was slated for 1 pm at Five Points Park. |
| Jan. 21 | St. Petersburg | | 5,000 | Williams Park; St. Petersburg Mayor Rick Kriseman was present. |
| | Sebring | | | Event planned at Sebring: march along US-27 between Hammock Rd to Sebring Parkway - rally at Sebring Women's Club |
| | Tallahassee | | 450 | Standing Together; steps of the Old Capitol |
| | Vero Beach | | ~33 | Merrill P. Barber Bridge |
| | The Villages | | 400-500 | Lake Sumter Landing |
| | West Palm Beach | | 300+ | In Palm Beach, Florida, home to President Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate, several hundred people gathered carrying anti-Trump signs, preventing Trump from traveling there as he initially planned. About two miles away, a far different group of about 50 Trump supporters gathered at the intersection of Southern Boulevard and South Flagler Drive. |
Georgia | | Athens | | 200 | Topics included Donald Trump, women's rights and Planned Parenthood. |
Georgia | | Atlanta | | 200+ | At 11:30 am, 200 people marched from Woodruff Park around the 1.75-mile government loop. At noon, participants went to the Georgia Alliance for Social Justice's "Power to the Polls" rally at The Bakery on Warner Street. Though the overall turnout was nowhere near last year's tally of 60,000, people were no less energized to get out the vote. Speaking at the rally were Women's March co-chairs Tamika Mallory and Linda Sarsour, actress Alyssa Milano, Georgia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams, and Planned Parenthood Southwest CEO Staci Fox. US Reps John Lewis & Hank Johnson, who were held back in D.C. during the government shutdown, stepped out of the House Chamber long enough to address the rally through a phone call. |
Georgia | Jan. 20 & 21 | Savannah | | 500+ | 500 people gathered at Wright Square, including former State Rep. Stacey Evans, another female candidate for governor of Georgia / anniversary celebration of the 2017 Savannah Women's March took place at the Savannah Film Company. |
Georgia | | Statesboro | | 200 | March from Bulloch County Annex to Stateboro Courthouse |
| | Hilo | | 1,000+ | Queen Liliu’okalani Gardens - Mo’oheau Bandstand. The big guest speaker was Teresa Shook, the Maui grandmother credited with beginning the whole Women's March movement. |
| | Honolulu | | thousands | Hawaii State Capitol |
| Jan. 21 | Kailua-Kona | | thousands | Hale Halawai O Halualoa. Organizers locally weren't sure on Sunday, but the crowd looked to be near what last year's Kona turnout of 3,800. |
| | Kauai | | several hundred | |
| | Maui | | 3,500 - 5,000 | Thousands attended the peaceful march held at University of Hawaii Maui College campus in Kahului. 100 marchers were met by three loud counterprotesters w/ a bullhorn, denouncing feminist issues. |
| | Molokai | | | |
| Jan. 21 | Boise | | 3,000 | Idaho State Capitol Building |
| | Idaho Falls | | hundreds | Idaho Falls’ second annual Power to the Polls Women's March began at the Museum of Idaho, where Mayor Rebecca Casper spoke to a crowd of hundreds. Afterwards, people marched to Library Plaza on Braodway, then headed to the end of Memorial in front of the offices of US Rep Mike Simpson and Sen. Mike Crapo. |
| | Ketchum | | 600 | Town Square |
| | Sandpoint | | 951 | North Idaho Women's March was held at Sandpoint Middle School. The event's keynote speaker was US Rep Paulette Jordan, who in Dec 2017 had announced her run for governor of Idaho, hoping to serve as the first Native American woman in such office. |
| Jan. 21 | Twin Falls | | | Event planned at Twin Falls Family Courthouse |
| | Bloomington | | | Event planned in Bloomington, Ill. |
| | Carbondale | | 1,000 | Southern Illinois Women's March attracted hundreds at Carbondale Civic Center. March organizer Liz Hunter said the turnout surpassed her expectations, and thought there might have been more than 1,000 marchers |
| | Chicago | | 300,000 | Thousands of mostly female marchers gathered at last year's location in Grant Park, with many carrying protest signs with slogans such as "Strong women raising strong women." |
| | East Peoria | | 500 - 600+ | Riverfront Park |
| | Galesburg | | 34 | Knox County Courthouse |
| | Kankakee | | 200 | Kankakee County Courthouse |
| | Rock Island | | 300+ | Schwiebert Riverfront Park - Rock Island County Clerk's Office |
| | Rockford | | thousands | Rockford City Market - Second First Church |
| | Springfield | | 500 - 1,000 | Rally held at the Old State Capitol |
| Jan. 21 | Wheaton | | | The Women's March Naperville 2018, originally set for Sunday, was officially canceled in favor of rolling the event into the 2018 Chicago march. However, a Facebook event remained online, with 12 people marked as "going" and 34 "interested" as of Saturday afternoon. Meanwhile, in lieu of Naperville's Sunday march, a candidate meet-and-great was scheduled in the nearby city of Wheaton, at Panera Bread off of Naperville Rd. |
| | Bloomington | | 200 | Bloomington Resistance March gathered at the Monroe County Courthouse |
| Jan. 21 | Evansville | | hundreds | University of Evansville Campus |
| Jan. 21 | Fort Wayne | | 500 | Allen County Courthouse. Courtney Tritch, a Democratic candidate for the U.S. representative seat including the Fort Wayne area, asked those present to make 2018 the Year of the Woman. |
| | Indianapolis | | 3,500 - 4,000 | American Legion Mall - Indiana State Capitol Building |
| | Madison | | | Event planned at Corner of Main and Elm |
| | Bettendorf | | | USW Local 105 |
| | Decorah | | 750 | Mary Christopher Park - Winneshiek County Courthouse |
| | Des Moines | | 6,000 - 10,000 | Iowa State Capitol. "If You Can't Hear Our Voice, Hear Our Vote" State Representative Liz Bennett spoke |
| | Dubuque | | 100 | Washington Park Gazebo |
| | Iowa City | | 1,000+ | Iowa City Pedestrian Mall |
| | Lamoni | | | event planned at The Coliseum |
| | Lawrence | | 1,500 - 2,500 | South Park - City Hall. Many people came here for the lack of an event in Kansas City, KS. Vice Mayor Lisa Larsen was present. |
| | Pittsburg | | 200 | Russ Hall, PSU; event hosted by Southeast Kansas chapter of the National Organization for Women |
| Jan. 21 | Topeka | | 400 | Kansas State Capitol. Speakers included State Sens. Laura Kelly & Marci Francisco, who were respectively running for Kansas governor and Secretary of State. |
| | Wichita | | 500 | Women's March on Air Capital at City Hall |
| | Lexington | | 2,000+ | Lexington Women's March 2018 at Robert F. Stephens Courthouse Plaza. Kentucky Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes spoke |
| Jan. 21 | Louisville | | 5,000+ | Muhammad Ali Center. "We can change the world but we have got to be together" - Urban League President and CEO Sadiqa Reynolds |
| | Owensboro | | dozens | Dozens of people met at the Owensboro riverfront to march together |
| Jan. 21 | Paducah | | ~100 | Robert Cherry Civic Center. Paducah's first female mayor, Brandi Harless, joined the celebration |
| | Pikeville | | 80+ | Pikeville City Park |
| | New Orleans | | 10,000 - 15,000 | The march, which began and ended in Duncan Plaza, stretching for a half-mile-plus loop through the French Quarter, was the largest single protest in the history of New Orleans. Featured speaker, LaToya Cantrell, the first female mayor-elect of New Orleans, said, "We walked through the streets of New Orleans demanding that the rights of women be upheld to the highest level." |
| | Shreveport | | 800+ | Caddo Parish Courthouse |
| | Augusta | | 3,000 - 4,500 | Maine Women's March 2.0 at Maine State House |
| | Bangor | | 1,000+ | Mid & Northern Maine Women's March Year 2; Piece Memorial Park |
| | Bar Harbor | | | Event planned at Bar Harbor Village |
| | Brunswick | | 150-200 | Brunswick Gazebo on the Mall |
| Jan. 21 | Portland | | 200 | Women's March One Year Anniversary: Reconnect, Refresh, Resist; SPACE Gallery |
| | Prospect Harbor | | | Gouldsboro Women's March 2.0; event planned at Gouldsboro Town Office |
| | Annapolis | | hundreds | Lawyers Mall - Susan Campbell Park. Newly elected Annapolis Mayor Gavin Buckley kicked off the rally |
| | Baltimore | | 7,000 | Baltimore Women's March: March Forward held on January 20, from 11 to 2 p.m. beginning at War Memorial Plaza; bigger turnout than the 5,000 from last year. Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh & city councilwoman Shannon Sneed spoke. |
| Jan. 21 | Frederick | | hundreds | corner of North Market & Patrick Streets; walk along Carroll Creek toward the amphitheater |
| Jan. 21 | Ocean City | | hundreds | Boardwalk next to the Hugh T. Cropper Inlet parking lot. Cambridge, MD Mayor Victoria Jackson-Stanley spoke to the crowd before the march began. |
| | Takoma Park | | 12 | Event planned at Piney Branch Elementary, with Mayor Kate Stewart scheduled to speak. |
| Jan. 21 | Westminster | | 300+ | People of all ages gathered on Sunday in front of Jeanniebird Baking Co., and marched up and down Main St. |
| Jan. 21 | Andover | | 200 | Shawsheen Square |
| | Ayer | | 500+ | Ayer Town Hall |
| | Cambridge | | 10,000 | Cambridge/Boston Women's March 2018: The People Persist, organized by Massachusetts Peace Action and March Forward Massachusetts. Up to 10,000 met at the Cambridge Common, a much smaller area than the Boston Common where 150,000+ gathered in 2017. U.S. Senators Ed Markey and Elizabeth Warren had planned to speak, but were in Washington and unable to attend the event. State Attorney General Maura Healey, however, was available to speak at the rally. Also present were a group of Trump-supporting counter-protesters, who were separated from the event by police and Veterans for Peace. |
| Jan. 21 | Charlton | | | Event planned at Charlton Arts & Activities Center |
| | Greenfield | | 500 | Greenfield Town Common & Square; 2nd annual Franklin County Women's Rally |
| | Hyannis | | hundreds | Cape & Islands Women's March, Hyannis Village Green. Emceed by State Rep Sarah Peake |
| Jan. 21 | Lowell | | 120 | Lowell Solidarity March and DDD ; UMass Lowell Inn & Conference Center 2-6 pm. Former Newton Mayor & 2018 candidate for governor Setti Warren spoke at the event. |
| | Martha's Vineyard | | 50+ | Five Corners, Vineyard Haven |
| | Nantucket | | 100+ | Nantucket United Methodist Church |
| | New Bedford | | hundreds | Custom House Square - New Bedford Public Library. New Bedford Mayor Jon Mitchell and his wife Ann Partridge addressed the rally from the library steps |
| | Northampton | | 2,000 | 2nd annual Pioneer Valley Women's March - protesters marched from Sheldon Field to Northampton City Hall |
| | Pittsfield | | 200 | hosted by The Berkshire Theatre Group on South St |
| | Shrewsbury | | dozen | Event planned at Shrewsbury Town Common |
| | Topsfield | | | Tri-Town Women's March, Topsfield Commons |
| | Adrian | | 250 | Event planned at Old Lenawee County Courthouse |
| | Ann Arbor | | 3,000 - 4,000 | #WeToo: Celebrating a New Way; outside the Federal Building / University of Michigan Diag |
| | Bay City | | 100 | Bay City Hall |
| | Detroit | | | J20 Rally & March; Detroit had hosted the Women's Convention in October 2017 |
| Jan. 21 | Douglas / Saugatuck | | 1,000+ | Over a thousand people gathered at Beery Park and marched over the bridge to downtown Saugatuck. Some Trump supporters were present. |
| Jan. 21 | Farmington Hills | | 177 | event planned at Farmington Hills Manor Banquet & Restaurant |
| Jan. 21 | Grand Rapids | | hundreds | Rosa Parks Circle |
| | Holland | | 350 | Centennial Park |
| Jan. 21 | Houghton | | 500 | Event planned at Portage Lake Lift Bridge |
| Jan. 21 | Kalamazoo | | 3,000 | Western Michigan University, march to Bronson Park. The crowd was triple the size of last year's turnout. |
| Jan. 21 | Lansing | | 5,000 | Michigan's largest Women's March rally in 2018 took place at the State Capitol in Lansing. Cindy Garcia, the wife of Jorge Garcia, 39, of Lincoln Park, who was deported to Mexico Monday as part of a Trump administration crackdown on undocumented immigrants, drew cheers as she spoke about her family's situation. |
| Jan. 21 | Marquette | | thousands | march from Main St to Front St, then down Washington St, ending with a rally in front of the post office |
| Jan. 21 | Midland | | 400+ | Corner of Eastlawn and Saginaw |
| Jan. 21 | Saint Joseph | | | Event planned at The Bluff |
| | Traverse City | | thousands | Traverse City Chamber of Commerce; police estimated the crowd was "comparable to last year's overwhelming 3,000." |
| | Bemidji | | 500 | The Sanford Center - BSU's Beaux Arts Ballroom. Bemidji Mayor Rita Albrecht spoke at the event. |
| Jan. 21 | Caledonia | | | Event planned at The Wired Rooster Coffee Shop |
| | Duluth | | hundreds | Twin Ports Women's March 2018 gathered at the Building for Women, then marched along First Street to Duluth City Hall. Mayor Emily Larson was one of the speakers. |
| | Fergus Falls | | | Event planned at The Spot Panini and Wine |
| | Grand Marais | | 190 | Event planned at Harbor Park; hosted by Arrowhead Indivisible |
| | Mankato | | ~50 | Jackson Park |
| Jan. 21 | Morris | | 170 | Event planned at Morris Senior Center |
| | Rochester | | 180 | Winter Is Coming - Women's March; Peace Plaza, 2pm Indivisible Rochester |
| Jan. 21 | St. Paul | | 2,500 | Union Depot. State Rep Ilhan Omar, DFL-Minneapolis, spoke the crowd |
| Jan. 21 | Thief River Falls | | | Event planned at City Hall |
| | Jackson | | 500 | Mississippi State Capitol; hosted by Indivisible Jackson |
| | Columbia | | 1,650 - 2,000 | Boone County Courthouse Square |
| | Kansas City | | 500 | three-mile walk from Brookside to Swope Park, ending with a rally at Unity Southeast Church |
| | St. Louis | | 8,000 | march from Union Station to Old Courthouse. More than 40 speakers addressed the crowd at Luther Ely Smith Plaza and City Hall |
| Jan. 19 | Springfield | | | Planned event - Springfield Women's March Anniversary Action / #PowerToThePolls voter registration tour, a 24-hour event, started Friday evening at Sisters in Thyme Bistro & Bakery and wrapped up on Saturday evening at Queen City Wine Dive. |
| | West Plains | | | The Yellow House |
| | Billings | | hundreds | The Women's March in Billings drew a large crowd that marched to North Park Community Center. Native American marchers raised concerns about missing and murdered indigenous women. |
| | Bozeman | | 1,300 | People gathered at Montana State University and marched to the Strang Union building. Bozeman Mayor Cyndy Andrus was present. Native American marchers raised concerns about missing and murdered indigenous women. |
| | Browning | | | Events were held in Browning. |
| | Butte | | | Events were held in Butte. |
| | Great Falls | | 300 | Nearly 300 people attended the Rise Together for Democracy observance that started in Gibson Park and ended at the YWCA, although Gerry Jennings of Great Falls Rising, which cosponsored the event along with the YWCA, said she heard crowd estimates as high as 1,000 |
| | Helena | | 2,000 | In Helena, a Women's March was followed by a Rise Together for Democracy Rally in the Rotunda of the Montana State Capitol. State Sen. Christine Kaufmann spoke to the crowd. Whereas in 2017 Helena served as the one Montana location for a crowd of 10,000, this year there were nine rallies across the state, putting the crowd total at 8,500. |
| | Kalispell | | hundreds | Women's March in Depot Park. |
| | Miles City | | 50 | Riverside Park |
| | Missoula | | 3,000 | Gathering at Wilma Theatre; march on Higgins Avenue to Caras Park. After last year's marches were criticized for excluding people of color and other marginalized communities, this year's march promoted an intersectional feminist movement by highlighting the voices of Native women, black women, transgender women, immigrant women, women with disabilities, and more. |
| | Lincoln | | 1,000+ | March began at 3pm at University of Nebraska Student Union, proceeding down Centennial Mall to the steps of the Capitol Building. Jessica McClure, a candidate for the House of Representatives, said last year's march motivated her campaign. U.S. Senate candidate Jane Raybould also spoke. |
| | Loup City | | 100+ | South 7th Street |
| | Omaha | | 8,000+ | Downtown Omaha |
| | Wayne | | 22 | Event held in Wayne, NE |
| Jan. 21 | Las Vegas | | 8,000 | The "Power to the Polls" campaign to register a million new voters was launched in Las Vegas with a massive turnout at Sam Boyd Stadium. NPR's Leila Fadel on PBS explained that the goal was to flip swing states like Nevada, which is also considered to be a battleground state. Las Vegas was also chosen in the aftermath of the country's deadliest gun massacre on Oct 2, 2017. Among featured speakers were: Alicia Garza, one of the founders of Black Lives Matter; Cecile Richards, current president of Planned Parenthood; singer & actress Cher, actress Marisa Tomei; US Rep John Lewis and US Senator Catherine Cortez Masto who, in 2016, became the first woman to represent Nevada and the first Latina to serve in the Senate. Also present was US Rep Paulette Jordan, who had just spoken at a Saturday rally in Sandpoint, Idaho. |
| | Reno | | 10,000 - 12,000 | Bruce R Thompson Federal Building; the crowd stretched from Liberty Street to California Avenue. |
| | Stateline | | 400 | The 2nd Women's March to South Lake Tahoe began at Hard Rock Hotel & Casino. |
| | Concord | | 1,000+ | New Hampshire State House. Sen. Maggie Hassan and Rep. Annie Kuster were both expected to speak at the Saturday rally, but organizers say they were unable to leave D.C. |
| | Francestown | | 134 | event in Francestown |
| Jan. 21 | Jackson | | 500 | Jackson Covered Bridge - Grammar School |
| | Lancaster | | | Event planned |
| Jan. 21 | Peterborough | | hundreds | Peterborough Town Hall |
| | Portsmouth | | 1,000+ | Event planned at Market Square |
| | Wilton | | | Public Library front lawn - Wilton Main Street Park and Riseup Center, Brick Mill Complex |
| | Glen Rock | | 80 | Glen Rock-Main Line Train Station |
| | Leonia | | 300+ | Leonia Middle School - Broad Ave |
| | Monroe | | | Event planned in Monroe, with State Senator Linda Greenstein and Mayor Jerry Tamburro. |
| | Morristown | | 15,000 - 20,000 | Shortly after the 2017 Women's March on New Jersey in Trenton, a group known as NJ 11th for Change started showing up every Friday at the headquarters of US Rep Rodney Frelinghuysen in Morristown, demanding a town-hall meeting to answer concerns about the fate of the Affordable Care Act. In December 2017, organizers of the Trenton march moved the upcoming 2018 event to Morristown, known for its historical significance, but also by which time Frelinghuysen had numerous mid-term challengers from both parties for his seat in Congress. The march in Morristown started at Town Hall on South Street, and ended at the Town Green. Attendance ranged between 15,000 and 20,000, which far surpassed the original expectations of 4,000 people, and more than doubled last year's estimated 7,500 at Trenton. Newly sworn-in Democratic Governor Phil Murphy addressed the rally; his wife, First Lady Tammy Murphy, said she was a victim of sexual violence while a student at the University of Virginia. |
| | Ocean City | | 600 | Hundreds of people met at 9th Street Park, and marched up & down Asbury Ave. Congressional candidate Tanzie Youngblood spoke to the rally. |
| | Westfield | | 1,500 - 2,000 | rally at the train station, march thru downtown to Mindowaskin Park |
| Jan. 21 | Alamogordo | | 61 | The First Annual Alamogordo Women's March; Otero County Courthouse - Pavilion at Alameda Park |
| Jan. 21 | Albuquerque | | thousands | Civic Plaza. Elizabeth Kistin Keller, the First Lady of Albuquerque, spoke to the crowd |
| Jan. 21 | Fort Sumner | | | Event planned in Fort Sumner |
| Jan. 21 | Las Cruces | | 800 | Plaza de Las Cruces, Downtown Mall |
| | Portales | | 40 | outside the Roosevelt County Courthouse |
| Jan. 21 | Santa Fe | | 4,000 - 5,000 | West DeVargas St. - Santa Fe Plaza |
| | Socorro | | ~140 | March from Tech's Gate to the Plaza |
| | Taos | | 200-550 | Taos Plaza - Kit Carson Park |
| | Truth or Consequences | | 12 | Event planned at Healing Waters Plaza |
| | Albany | | 5,000 - 6,000 | Rally held at West Capitol Park. Albany Mayor Kathy Sheehan was present, but US Rep Paul Tonko, who wanted to be present, was stuck in Washington DC. |
| | Binghamton | | 1,000+ | Martin Luther King Jr. Promenade - United Presbyterian Church of Binghamton |
| Jan. 21 | Buffalo | | 4,500 | Niagara Square outside City Hall - march down Delaware Ave toward downtown Buffalo, through Lafayette Square, and back. Mayor Byron W. Brown spoke at the march |
| | Canton | | 150 | Unitarian Universalist Church |
| | Cobleskill | | 450 | Event planned at Centre Park |
| | Glens Falls | | hundreds | Old Planned Parenthood at Warren & Oak - gazebo in City Park. Among the crowd were at least six NY-21 Democratic congressional candidates hoping to unseat Republican incumbent Rep. Elise Stefanik; Tedra Cobb sent a group representing her to the Glens Falls march while she marched in the town of Plattsburgh. |
| | Hudson | | 2,000 - 2,500 | This was larger than last year's crowd of 1,200, according to police. The march began at 7th Street Park, and Indivisible CD 19 NY lead the event. Ten people spoke and then activists marched from Warren to Basilica Hudson on the waterfront. Voter registration was available at Basilica Hudson. |
| | Lewis | | 200 | Adirondack Women's March - 200 participants went up to the Lewis Cemetery, atop what was once known as Suffrage Hill, and laid flowers on the grave of famed suffragette Inez Milholland. Afterwards, the march headed to Lewis Veterans' Park and Lewis Town Hall, before returning to the Lewis Congregational Church. |
| | New York City | | 200,000+ | There were more than 200,000 protesters at the march in New York on January 20, 2018. New York Governor Andrew Cuomo spoke to the crowd. |
| | North Creek | | | Main Street North Creek |
| | Pleasantville | | 250 | Memorial Plaza Gazebo; hosted by Indivisible Pleasantville |
| | Port Jefferson | | several hundred | Resistance Corner, 5141 Nesconset Hwy |
| | Port Jervis | | 300 | St. Peter's Lutheran Church |
| | Rochester | | several hundred | Held at Washington Square Park. Indivisible Rochester and Gender Equity Movement of SUNY Brockport organized the rally. A letter from Rochester Mayor Lovely Warren, who at the time was in Seneca Falls, was read to the crowd. |
| | Sag Harbor | | hundreds | windmill on Long Wharf / Flying Point Surf Boutique - American Hotel, Main St |
| | Seneca Falls | | 12,000 - 15,000 | Thousands gathered at the Women's Rights National Historical Park, site of the country's first women's rights convention in 1848 ; police said more people attended this year than last. Rochester's first female Mayor, Lovely Warren, pleaded for women to get involved in government at all levels, saying they are woefully underrepresented. New York Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul also spoke to the crowd. |
| | Staten Island | | 250 | The Staten Island Women Who March, Move Forward Staten Island, Wagner College students and many other Staten Islanders met at 9 a.m. at the Staten Island Ferry Terminal. |
| | Syracuse | | 300 | CNY Women Rising 2018 - march from Laci's Tapas Bar to ArtRage Gallery |
| | Utica | | 200+ | March from YWCA to City Hall |
| | Watertown | | several hundred | All Souls Unitarian Universalist Church |
| | Woodstock | | 5,000 | Andy Lee Baseball Field - Bradley Meadow via Mill Hill Road |
| | Asheville | | 3,000 | Memorial Stadium, Asheville Mayor Esther Manheimer spoke |
| | Black Mountain | | 500+ | Town Square |
| | Burnsville | | | Burnsville Town Center |
| | Charlotte | | 5,000+ | "Remarchable Women" First Ward Park - Romare Bearden Park. Charlotte's first female African-American mayor, Vi Lyles, addressed the crowd |
| | Hillsborough | | 500+ | Old Orange County Courthouse |
| | Raleigh | | 5,000 - 10,000 | Halifax Mall; more of a rally than a march |
| | Wilmington | | 2,000+ | Thalian Hall downtown. Organized in part by Women Organizing for Wilmington , currently at 1900 members |
| | Winston-Salem | | thousands | Corpening Plaza. Mayor Allen Joines addressed the crowd |
| Jan. 19 | Bismarck | | | event planned for Friday, January 19 |
| | Fargo | | 1,000 | Fargo Civic Center Centennial Hall. The rally took place in the lower level, where space limited the audience to about 600 or 700. However, hundreds more waited outside the Civic to join in the march that followed the rally. Participants kept the tone of the event upbeat, even when a Fargo resident known for his pro-white rhetoric made an appearance. |
| | Grand Forks | | 200+ | Empire Arts Center |
| | Athens | | 500 - 600 | First United Methodist Church - Athens County Courthouse |
| | Cincinnati | | 10,000 - 12,000 | The Second Cincinnati Women's March, organized by United We Stand, met at the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center. The route stretched for 1.5 miles along Race Street and back. Meanwhile, a pro-life march took place near Fountain Square. |
| | Cleveland | | 7,000 - 10,000 | Organized by the Women's March Northeast Ohio chapter; voter registration at Cleveland Public Square; march to Cleveland City Hall at Willard Park and back. |
| | Columbus | | 3,000 | Greater Columbus Convention Center - Ohio Statehouse. Columbus City Councilwoman Elizabeth Brown, daughter of US Sen. Sherrod Brown, spoke to a cheering crowd inside the Convention Center. |
| | Dayton | | few thousand | An event was held at Courthouse Square |
| | Lakewood | | 90 | NE Ohio Power to the Polls Forum; Lakewood UCC |
| | Lima | | 17 | Lima's Town Square |
| | Mount Vernon | | | Event planned at Public Square |
| | Newark | | 129 | Licking County Courthouse Square |
| Jan. 21 | Toledo | | 600 | YWCA of Northwest Ohio Rise Unity March; Toledo Loves Love Wall - Trinity Episcopal Church at Summit St. Participants included State Rep Teresa Fedor. |
| | Wooster | | 200 | Event planned at Wooster Public Square Historic District |
| | Oklahoma City | | thousands | Oklahoma State Capitol. Protesters chanted, “We need a leader, not a creepy tweeter!” |
| | Tulsa | | 3,000+ | Guthrie Green - Living Arts of Tulsa Building |
| | Albany | | 200 | Power of Hope Women's Rally; Linn County Courthouse |
| | Astoria | | | Event planned at Lovell Showroom - Turn the Tide 2018 Regional Summit, hosted by Indivisible North Coast Oregon |
| | Bend | | ~3,000 | Event planned at Drake Park |
| | Brookings | | 32 | Brookings-Harbor Women's March; event planned at Democratic Headquarters |
| | Coos Bay | | ~300 | Event planned at Coos Bay Boardwalk |
| | Corvallis | | 3,000+ | Central Park - Northwest Jackson Avenue |
| | Eugene | | 3,000 - 7,000 | Indivisible Eugene's Women's March for Action began at Wayne Lyman Morse Federal Courthouse and headed north toward Mill Street. Signs included "In our America women are in charge of their own bodies." Event organizers estimated 5,000-7,000 people attended the march; Eugene Police estimated 3,000-4,000. US Rep Peter DeFazio, who was stuck in Washington due to the government shutdown, addressed the crowd over the phone. |
| | Grants Pass | | 900 | March from Riverside Park to Josephine County Courthouse. The next day, 350 people showed up in the rain for the annual March for Life in Grants Pass and took the same path in reverse. |
| | Joseph | | 34 | event planned in Joseph, Oregon |
| | Klamath Falls | | 200+ | Klamath County Government Center |
| | La Grande | | 300 | March planned at Union County Offices |
| | Medford | | several thousand | Women's March Southern Oregon, which in 2017 took place in Ashland, relocated to the greater city of Medford in 2018 for its second event. At least several thousand came to Hawthorne Park and marched half a mile through downtown to Pear Blossom Park. Though the end point could accommodate as many as 10,000 people, it was unclear whether this march matched last year's turnout of 8,000, but the level of commitment and determination was no less diminished. Speakers included State Rep. Pam Marsh & Democratic congressional candidate Jamie McLeod-Skinner. |
| | Newport | | 148 | march from City Hall to Newport High School |
| | Pendleton | | 350-400 | Pendleton City Hall |
| | Port Orford | | | Battle Rock Wayside Park - Highway 101 - public library; event hosted by Indivisible North Curry County |
| Jan. 20 & 21 | Portland | | ~ 1,000 | Dozens of police in riot gear were present in Portland as four protests and rallies took place over the weekend, with hundreds of demonstrators in attendance, though not nearly as many as last year's 100,000. The Trump Impeachment March met at Terry Schrunk Plaza and marched through downtown Portland to the Battleship Oregon Memorial. Along the way, the marchers passed by Pioneer Courthouse Square, site of the #MeToo March and SpeakOUT rally. Later in the evening, a Freedom March led by right-wing group Patriot Prayer began at Salmon Street Springs. The Indigenous Womxn's March took place at Terry Schrunk Plaza, where once again people came by the hundreds. |
| | Roseburg | | 200 | NW Garden Valley Blvd |
| | Salem | | 1,000 | Braving both the rain and a guy waving a Nazi flag, hundreds of people gathered at the state capitol and marched through Salem |
| | The Dalles | | 400 | Gorge Womxn's March 2018; began and ended at City Park on Union Street; last year's march had 150 people |
| | Tillamook | | 100+ | We're Still Here! Women's March Tillamook; Pedestrian Plaza |
| | Bethlehem | | 500 | Payrow Plaza - an anticipated crowd of 200 more than doubled by noon |
| | Bloomsburg | | 150 | Event planned near Bloomsburg Fountain at Main & Market Streets |
| | Carlisle | | dozen | A small crowd gathered at The Old Courthouse on the Square |
| Jan. 21 | Doylestown | | 1,000 | Bucks County Old Courthouse on East Court Street - Main & Court Streets |
| Jan. 21 | Erie | | hundreds | Perry Square |
| | Gettysburg | | hundreds | Lincoln Square - Unity Park |
| | Hollidaysburg | | 200+ | Blair County Courthouse - Allegheny St; a growth in attendance from 35 people last year |
| Jan. 21 | Indiana | | 150+ | IRMC Park |
| Jan. 21 | Millheim | | | Event planned at Millheim Post Office |
| | Philadelphia | | 40,000 - 55,000 | Event hosted by Philly Women Rally, Inc. Protesters marched on Benjamin Franklin Parkway, from Logan Circle to Eakins Oval at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, from whence lead organizer Emily Cooper delivered a speech to the rally. While last year's event drew more than 50,000, organizers believe that 2017's powerful #MeToo and "Time's Up" movements over sexual harassment helped boost this year's attendance. Organizers also concentrated on "diversity and inclusion" in response to criticisms about the 2017 March; specific themes included racial justice. Members of the Black Lives Matter movement, Camp Sojourner and Girls Incorporated programs were among the marchers. Local politicians, such as Jannie Blackwell, Cherelle Parker, Maria Quiñones-Sánchez, and Rebecca Rhynhart participated. Gov. Tom Wolf's deputy chief of staff Nedia Ralston spoke on behalf of the governor. |
| Jan. 21 | Pittsburgh | | 30,000 | Market District Giant Eagle - Let's Get Organized the Day Before the March to the Polls; event began at City County Building on Grant Street. Thousands of people, including Mayor Bill Peduto, marched to Market Square; organizers estimated 30,000 people, a bigger turnout than last year's 25,000. Voting was a constant theme; a number of those in attendance carried signs or wore buttons supporting particular political candidates, such as Democrat Conor Lamb for the 18th Congressional District in a March 13 special election. |
| Jan. 21 | Pottsville | | 40 | Union Station |
| | Sharon | | 500 | Columbia Theatre Park, Downtown Sharon. Hosted by Indivisible Mercer |
| | State College | | 300-500 | Allen Street Gates - State College Municipal Building |
| | Providence | | 1,000+ | Rhode Island State House South Lawn. Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo and Providence Mayor Jorge Elorza attended and mingled, but no politicians or political candidates were invited to speak, as the organizers wanted the crowd to hear new voices rather than stump speeches. |
| | Charleston | | 3,500 | Rally for Electoral Justice, Brittlebank Park |
| | Greenville | | 1,000+ | Falls Park on the Reedy River |
| | Myrtle Beach | | 300+ | Anderson Park; attendees marched on a sidewalk on Ocean Blvd to Plyler Park |
| | Custer | | 7 | Event planned at Way Park, by the CC Courthouse |
| | Pierre | | | Rally planned in the State Capital |
| | Rapid City | | hundreds | Central High School - Memorial Park - band shell |
| | Sioux Falls | | 2,500+ | Carnegie Town Hall - Minnehaha County Courthouse. Sioux Falls Mayor Mike Huether presented marchers with a key to the city for their marching efforts. |
| | Bristol | | 75-100 | Bristol Virginessee Women's March; in proximity to Bristol, Virginia |
| | Chattanooga | | 3,000+ | Coolidge Park. Chattanooga Mayor Andy Berke was present |
| | Johnson City | | 1,000+ | Women's March 2.0 Tri-Cities TN Rally; East Tennessee State University parking lot - Founders Park |
| Jan. 21 | Knoxville | | 14,000 | The Knoxville Women's March 2.0 was sponsored by Women's March - Knoxville, to "show their support for women's rights and the electoral victories women have won." But organizers were forced to change their rally/march starting point from Market Square to Krutch Park, with heavy police presence, when the Traditionalist Worker's Party, a neo-Nazi group, planned a counter-demonstration. On Sunday, about 20 white nationalists faced off against a crowd of thousands before leaving the area about an hour later, according to the Knoxville News-Sentinel. Meanwhile, 700 people gathered at a competing protest, March for Life, a few blocks away at Knoxville Convention Center. |
| | Memphis | | 1,000+ | First Congregational Church |
| | Nashville | | 15,000+ | Tennessee Women's March 2.0, Public Square Park - Bicentennial Mall. Clarksville Indivisible was one of many groups heading to the march. Nashville Mayor Megan Barry spoke to the crowd at the park. |
| Jan. 21 | Alpine | | 200 | Alpine Civic Center - Brewster County courthouse. Marfa Mayor Ann Marie Nafziger spoke |
| | Amarillo | | 100+ | Sponsored by Indivisible Amarillo, the second annual Women's March stretched from Ellwood Park to the Potter County Courthouse. |
| | Austin | | 10,000 | Hosted by Texas Reproductive Rights Rally. As many as 10,000 people gathered for a rally at Austin City Hall and marched to the Texas State Capitol. While lacking in numbers compared with 40,000-50,000 from last year's march, this one made up for in energy, enthusiasm and the occasional touch of dramatic choreography - a group of women dressed in "Handmaid's Tale" costume led the march, protesting against female oppression. Among the speakers at the capitol was former Texas state Sen. Wendy Davis, who in 2013 garnered national attention for her nearly 13-hour filibuster over new Texas abortion restrictions. Also present were two Democratic candidates for Governor of Texas, Lupe Valdez and Andrew White. |
| | Beaumont | | 100+ | Betty Smith Creative Arts Studio - Calder Avenue; hosted by Golden Triangle Indivisible |
| | Brownsville | | 200 | Washington Park; "Still We Rise" rally |
| Jan. 20 & 21 | Dallas | | 7,000 | The Dallas Women's March 2018 began at St Paul United Methodist Church, and proceeded through Uptown to a rally in Pike Park. The Dallas Morning News noted that Saturday's police estimate of 7,000 actually seemed larger than last year's turnout. State Reps. Helen Giddings and Victoria Neave, and County Commissioner Elba Garcia took part in the event. Around the same time, an Impeach Trump rally took place at City Hall. A few miles away at the Guadalupe Cathedral, the March for Life, marking the 45th anniversary of Roe vs. Wade, also attracted thousands of people. For good measure, a First Anniversary Women's March Rally was scheduled to take place on Sunday at Dallas City Hall Plaza. |
| | Denton | | 800 | Denton Courthouse Square |
| Jan. 21 | El Paso | | 500 | Centennial Plaza at University of Texas at El Paso - San Jacinto Plaza |
| | Fort Worth | | 5,000 | Tarrant County Courthouse |
| | Houston | | 20,000+ | Thousands once again participated in the half-mile walk from Buffalo Bayou Water Works Building to Houston City Hall. The turnout was almost as high as last year's crowd of 22,000. Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner was joined by his predecessor Annise Parker and police chief Art Acevedo. US Reps Al Green and Sheila Jackson Lee called in via speakerphone from Washington DC, where most of Congress was struggling to deal with the government shutdown. |
| | Lubbock | | 350 | Tim Cole Memorial Park / intersection of 19th Street and University Avenue |
| | Midland | | | Event planned at Corner of Wadley and Big Spring |
| | Nacogdoches | | 100+ | County Courthouse |
| | Palestine | | | Event planned: Farmer's Market - Anderson County Courthouse |
| | San Antonio | | 500 | Hosted by at least eight different organizations, including Texas 23rd District Indivisibles. Protesters gathered in front of San Fernando Cathedral, and marched past the Paul Elizondo Tower and City Hall before returning to Main Plaza. |
| | Waco | | 350 | Event held at Heritage Square |
| Jan. 20 & 21 | Weatherford | | | Parker County Democratic Headquarters served as a meeting point for carpooling to the Fort Worth march A town hall meeting was scheduled for US Representative and Senate candidate Beto O'Rourke, but he was stuck in Washington DC along with many other members of Congress during the government shutdown. |
| | Wichita Falls | | dozens | Wichita Falls Women's March 2018; Sikes Lake - Parker Square Shopping Center |
| | Logan | | hundreds | Historic Cache County Courthouse Democratic Senate candidate Jenny Wilson was present. |
| | Ogden | | 200+ | Ogden Municipal Gardens |
| | Park City | | 1,000 | There were hundreds of women at the Respect Rally in Park City, in conjunction with the Sundance Film Festival. Rapper Common wowed the crowd by performing "The Day the Women Took Over." Featured speakers were Jane Fonda, Gloria Allred, Kathryn Hahn, Nick Offerman, Maria Bello, Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Tessa Thompson, Chloë Grace Moretz, Elle Fanning and Lena Waithe. Salt Lake City Mayor Jackie Biskupski also spoke to the crowd, as did Democratic Senate candidate Jenny Wilson. |
| | Brattleboro | | | Gathering in Solidarity; Pliny Park - Main and High Streets |
| Jan. 21 | Manchester | | dozens | The Large Roundabout |
| | Montpelier | | 3,000 | March For Our Future, Montpelier City Hall - Statehouse lawn |
| | Bristol | | 75-100 | Bristol Virginessee Women's March, Bristol Sign; in proximity to Bristol, Tennessee |
| | Independence / Galax / Hillsville | | | One march in Virginia went eastward through three cities, over a distance of 27 miles: The first leg started at 10 am at the Historic 1908 Courthouse in Independence, hosted by the Grayson County Sewing & Resistance Society; around 12:30 pm, the second leg, hosted by Huddle Up Twin County, continued through the Diversity Center in Galax; the final leg, also hosted by Huddle Up Twin County, stretched into Hillsville and arrived at Carter Pines Community Park Labyrinth, around 4 pm. |
| Jan. 21 | Norfolk | | 800+ | - The Hampton Roads Women's March Forward and "Girls Take Granby" kick-off rally started at noon in front of the Decker Half Moon Cruise Terminal in Town Point Park, and marched down Granby St to the Federal Courthouse and back. Two counter-protesters, one of whom was from Charlottesville, held up homemade signs in support of Donald Trump. |
| | Richmond | | 1,000+ | Women's March RVA, at Martin's in Carytown. Recently elected Governor Ralph Northam joined event organizers in leading the march. |
| | Roanoke | | thousands | Thousands of demonstrators marched in the afternoon from Elmwood Park amphitheater through downtown Roanoke. |
| | Williamsburg | | 2,000 | Colonial Williamsburg Courthouse, Duke of Gloucester St. The number of people present was almost three times that of 2017. |
| Jan. 19 | Anacortes | | 160 | Depot Arts Center |
| | Bellingham | | 2,000 - 2,500 | At Bellingham City Hall, about 2,000 to 2,500 people marched with many carrying signs referencing "immigration, sexual assault/harassment, President Donald Trump and the White House, women's rights, LGBTQ and minority rights, healthcare, environmental issues." It was sponsored by Women Marching for Unity, Equity, Justice, and Humanity to commemorate the anniversary of the 2017 historic march which drew 10,000 citizens into the streets. |
| | Eastsound | | 100 | Orcas Island; Waterfront Park - Village Green |
| | Ellensburg | | 200-300 | Kittitas County Courthouse |
| | Friday Harbor | | 1,000 | Island Women's March; San Juan County Courthouse |
| | Kenmore | | | March planned at Kenmore City Hall |
| | Longview | | 162 | event planned at Longview Civic Circle |
| | Moses Lake | | 100 | Moses Lake Surf n Slide Water Park |
| | Mount Vernon | | 450 | Pine Square |
| | Ocean Shores | | 150-200 | Ocean Shores Convention Center |
| | Olympia | | 8,000 | Thousands turned out for a rally at the Capitol in Olympia, followed by a march around Capitol Lake. State Rep. Laurie Jinkins spoke to the crowd. |
| | Omak | | 400 | Omak Civic League Park |
| | Port Townsend | | 4,000 | A colorful and boisterous crowd gathered peacefully at Quimper Mercantile on Water Street and walked five blocks to Pope Marine Park |
| Jan. 21 | Richland | | 1,000 | John Dam Plaza. About 1,000 marchers braved chilly, damp weather. |
| Jan. 20 & 21 | Seattle | | 50,000 - 90,000 | Tens of thousands marched in the Womxn's March 2.0 on Seattle from Cal Anderson Park to Seattle Center. Members of the group Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women helped lead the march and spoke about the violence faced by Native American women in particular. Seattle's first female mayor in nearly a century, Jenny Durkan, issued a call to combat racism & sexism at all levels, including the White House; State Rep Kristine Reeves also spoke. US Rep Pramila Jayapal was unable to speak as planned due to the ongoing budget battle in Washington D.C. The Womxn Act on Seattle consisted of training, workshops and lectures offered by about 90 organizations around the city. |
| | Shoreline | | 35 | event planned at grassy area near Walgreens, East side of Aurora Ave & 176th St |
| Jan. 21 | Spokane | | 6,000 - 6,500 | Spokane Convention Center. In its second year, the Spokane Women's March – now called the Spokane Women's Persistence March - had about 2,000 fewer participants than last year but showed no less spunk. Gathered at the Red Wagon in Riverfront Park, marchers assembled by the hundreds until the sea of people – mostly women – got so large it spilled out onto Spokane Falls Boulevard. |
| Jan. 21 | Vancouver | | | Water Resources Education Center—Bruce E Hagensen Community Room |
| | Walla Walla | | ~ 2,500 | First Congregational Church - Alder Street |
| | Yakima | | 800+ | Millennium Plaza |
| | Beckley | | ~75 | Shoemaker Square. State Sen. Richard Ojeda spoke to the almost all female crowd |
| | Charleston | | 100 | The Voter's March and March for Impeachment was held at the West Virginia Capitol. Later in the afternoon, marchers came together for a Women's March anniversary part at Sam's Uptown Café |
| Jan. 21 | Morgantown | | hundreds | The first Morgantown Women's March was held at WVU Mountainlair Student Union rally, titled "Handmaid's Protest - Women's March Still Strong One Year Later"; Mountaineers for Progress |
| | Eau Claire | | 300-400 | rally at Phoenix Park, march to Unitarian Universalist Congregation |
| | Green Bay | | nearly 400 | YWCA Greater Green Bay |
| | Janesville | | | Event planned at Janesville, WI Post Office |
| | Milwaukee | | 1,500 - 3,000 | Women, men and children gathered on the Milwaukee County Courthouse square for the second annual Women's March "to protest the policies of President Donald Trump and urge voters to take control of Congress from Republicans in 2018." March organizer Sarah Pearson & state Sen. Lena Taylor addressed the crowd. |
| | Minocqua | | 200 | St. Matthias' Episcopal Church |
| | Sauk City | | 100 | Highway 12 bridge |
| | Walworth | | 100+ | Heyer Park / Walworth Square |
| | Wausau | | 300 | Event held at 400 Block |
| | Casper | | 350 | Beech St. Plaza - The Lyric |
| | Cheyenne | | 750 - 1,000 | In spite of a potentially threatening Facebook post comment about the Cheyenne march, between 750 and 1,000 people gathered at the Cheyenne Depot Plaza and marched down Capitol Avenue to the Wyoming Supreme Court. Voting and electing more women into office was emphasized by numerous speakers, including: Democratic gubernatorial candidate Mary Throne; state Rep Cathy Connolly ; state Rep James W. Byrd ; and march organizer Sara Burlingame, who announced her plans to run for Byrd's seat in the 44th House district. |
| Jan. 21 | Cody | | 300+ | Marches gathered in Cody's City Park to promote gender equality. Mayor Matt Hall spoke to the crowd; musician Garret Randolph played folk songs. |
| | Jackson Hole | | 300+ | Over 300 people met at Home Ranch Visitor Center and marched in downtown Jackson. |
| | Laramie | | 93 | Wyoming Art Party planned an event at The Laramie Plains Civic Center |
| | Pinedale | | 60 | Rocky Mountain Bank parking lot, 145 E. Pine St |