This is part of an ongoing move by the federal government to remove and alter National Park Service webpages related to LGBTQ ...
The National Parks Service has removed pages dedicated to historic transgender activists Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera ...
Among them was Elizabeth native Marsha P. Johnson. Today, following the removal of references to transgender and queer people and history from the Stonewall National Monument website, it is ...
The National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA), a nonpartisan organization that has worked for over a century to protect national parks and their historical integrity, condemned the NPS’s decision ...
On Feb. 25, a Black History month pride event was held at the LAC campus hosted for students to learn about the significance of Marsha P. Johnson and the obstacles she faced being a gay liberation ...
The National Park Service has removed transgender references from its website commemorating the 1969 Stonewall Uprising, erasing transgender activists such as Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera who ...
Marsha P Johnson's legacy continues to be celebrated ... where members of the LGBT community rose up in protest against police raids on the bar of the same name in Christopher Street, New York.
Children’s website lauds transgender activists alongside Michelle Obama and Holly Willoughby for International Women’s Day ...
Throughout history, there have been figures whose legacies have endured, continuing to shape movements and events. These ...
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