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The start of the march at C Street. -
Cheryl Seidner hugs a friend near the stage at the Women’s March. -
A group of Native American Women attended the march and posed for this group shot. -
Joy Hardin, who was in a motorized chair, was near the front of the stage for the speakers. -
Several thousand people gathered at the foot of C Street in Eureka for the Women’s March. The event coincided with marches around the country with news outlets reporting it as the largest protest in American history. -
Following the speakers the march proceeded down the boardwalk to F Street. -
Sister Grinnan Bearette of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence joined with the anarchists in chanting on the waterfront. -
The march came up F Street and then went down Third Street. -
The streets were packed with protesters. -
There were rainbow flags and an inverted U.S. flag signaling a nation in distress. -
Homemade signs abounded. -
Anarchists blocked the intersection of Fourth and H streets in Eureka following the march. The group appeared to have established a separate demonstration from the main march. -
Three protesters decided to remain in the intersection and be arrested to make their point. -
Captain Steve Watson arrests one of the protestors.
