The idea for the NAMES Project Memorial Quilt was conceived on November 27, 1985, by AIDS activist
Cleve Jones during the annual candlelight march, in remembrance of the
1978 assassinations of San Francisco Supervisor
Harvey Milk and Mayor
George Moscone. For the march, Jones had people write the names of loved ones that were lost to AIDS-related causes on signs, and then they taped the signs to the old
San Francisco Federal Building. All the signs taped to the building looked like an enormous patchwork quilt to Jones, and he was inspired. The NAMES Project officially started in 1987 in
San Francisco by Jones, Mike Smith, and volunteers Joseph Durant, Jack Caster, Gert McMullin, Ron Cordova, Larkin Mayo, Steve Kirchner, and Gary Yuschalk. Lacking a memorial service or grave site, the Quilt was often the only opportunity survivors had to remember and celebrate their loved ones' lives. Volunteers created hundreds and later thousands of panels in a storefront on Market Street. The Quilt is a memorial to and celebration of the lives of people lost to the
AIDS pandemic which marks it as a prominent forerunner of the twentieth century shift in memorial design that moved towards celebrating victims or survivors. reading names at the AIDS Quilt podium, prior to the 1993 March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay, and Bi Equal Rights and Liberation. students making a quilt panel in 1994. 2019 in San Francisco.
Inaugural Quilt display The Quilt made its first public appearance on October 11, 1987, during the
Second National March on Washington for Lesbian and Gay Rights on the
National Mall. Comprising 1,920 panels and covering an area larger than a
football field, 48 volunteers ceremonially unfolded the Quilt at sunrise. Participants read aloud the names represented in the Quilt, establishing a tradition followed at subsequent displays. The event drew half a million visitors that weekend.
Quilt tours and exhibits The inaugural national tour of The Quilt took place in spring and summer 1988, raising nearly half a million dollars. Assisted by over 9,000
volunteers, a seven-person crew traveled, displayed, and expanded The Quilt. Local panels added in each city tripled its size from 1,920 to over 6,000 panels by the tour's conclusion. The 1989 Quilt North America Tour visited 19
U.S. cities, including 7 in
Canada, coinciding with local
LGBT events in June and July, laying the groundwork for the Canadian AIDS Memorial Quilt. By October, the Quilt featured over 12,000 panels and was once again exhibited on
The Ellipse in
Washington, D.C. In October 1992, the entire Quilt, featuring panels from every state and 28 countries, was displayed on Washington's
National Mall. The quilt, more than 10 times its original size, with over 21,000 handmade panels, stretched from the base of the
Washington Monument to the
Lincoln Memorial in
President's Park. During President Clinton's
inaugural parade on January 20, 1993, the NAMES Project participated with over 200 volunteers marching down
Pennsylvania Avenue, carrying 90 Quilt panels. Spanning the
National Mall from the
Washington Monument to the
U.S. Capitol in Washington, The Quilt attracted nearly 1.2 million visitors in October 1996. Over the three-day event, more than 40,000 panels were displayed. by this point in time, the HIV/AIDS epidemic was finally seeing a major decline. In June 2004, The Quilt featured over 8,000 new panels created since the 1996 exhibit. The display took place on
The Ellipse in Washington, in observance of National HIV Testing Day. For the AIDS Memorial Quilt's 25th anniversary in July 2012, comprising over 48,000 panels honoring 94,000 lives lost to AIDS, it returned to the National Mall and 50 sites around D.C. during the
XIX International AIDS Conference. Due to its size, organizers rotated 1,500 panels daily at the Smithsonian Folklife Festival. This event marked the quilt's last full exhibition since 1996. As of 2020, the AIDS Memorial Quilt is available online, featuring 50,000 panels with nearly 110,000 names sewn into them. The collection is searchable by block number or name, allowing users to read the stories stitched into each panel. A guide is provided for navigating the collection if required. In June 2022, the National AIDS Memorial commemorated the 35th anniversary of the AIDS Memorial Quilt with a significant outdoor display in Golden Gate Park's Robin Williams Meadow. The exhibition showcased 3,000 panels, offering a poignant tribute to lives affected by AIDS. In 2024, panels from the AIDS Memorial Quilt were displayed at the
White House for the first time; this was an event led by President
Joe Biden and First Lady
Jill Biden.
Relocation In 1997, the NAMES Project headquarters moved from San Francisco to Washington, D.C., and in 2001 the quilt panels were moved from San Francisco to
Atlanta, Georgia. The NAMES Project Foundation was headquartered in Atlanta. In 2019, the organization announced that the Quilt would be relocating to San Francisco under the permanent care and stewardship of the
National AIDS Memorial. In 2020, its archives were relocated to the
American Folklife Center at the
Library of Congress. The AIDS Memorial Quilt is warehoused in San Francisco when not being displayed, and continues to grow, consisting of more than 50,000 individual memorial panels (to over 110,000 people) and weighing an estimated 54 tons as of 2022. ==Quilt construction and care==