The National Park Service, under a new executive order, has removed all mentions of transgender and queer identities from webpages associated with LGBTQ history. In response, the NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project has issued a statement.
Despite the ACLU crediting the Stonewall Rebellion to transgender women of color, most traces of trans and queer people were removed from the National Park website.
The National Park Service has eliminated references to transgender people from its Stonewall National Monument website, which now only refers to LGB persons.
Voices in the Lower Hudson Valley's LGBTQ+ community react to the removal of transgender references from sites run by the National Park Service.
Several hundred people with LGBTQ flags rallied at the Stonewall National Monument on Friday, a day after references to transgender Americans disappeared from the U.S. National Park Service website for the New York site commemorating a gay bar where resistance to a 1969 police raid sparked a civil rights movement.
References to transgender people were removed Thursday from a National Park Service website for the Stonewall National Monument, a park and visitor center in New York that commemorates a 1969 riot that became a pivotal moment for the LGBTQ+ rights movement.
References to transgender people have been removed from a National Park Service website for the Stonewall National Monument.
References to transgender people were removed Thursday from a National Park Service website for the Stonewall National Monument, a park and visitor center in New York that commemorates a 1969 riot that became a pivotal moment for the LGBTQ+ rights movement.
References to transgender people have been removed from a National Park Service website for the Stonewall National Monument.
References to transgender people have been removed from a National Park Service website for the Stonewall National Monument.
References to transgender people were removed Thursday from a National Park Service website for the Stonewall National Monument, a park and visitor center in New York that commemorates a 1969 riot that became a pivotal moment for the LGBTQ+ rights movement.