The National Park Service eliminated references to transgender people from its Stonewall National Monument website on ...
LGBTQ+ activists gathered at Christopher Park, just across from the historic Stonewall Inn, to protest against the removal of ...
Protesters rallied at the Stonewall National Monument in NYC after references to transgender and queer people were removed on the National Park Service website.
The National Park Service is the latest agency to remove references to the transgender community in line with President Trump ...
The website deleted all mentions of "transgender" and "queer" in its history of the Stonewall riots, and only referred to the riots' impact on lesbian, gay and bisexual people.
The change, which has sparked an outcry among the LGBTQ+ community, came after President Trump signed an executive order ...
But on Thursday, that appears to have changed, when part of the the National Park Service-run website no longer cited ...
The changes come after an executive order President Trump signed calling for the federal government to define sex as only ...
On Wednesday, the Stonewall website had included introductory text that said, “Before the 1960s, almost everything about living openly as a lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or queer (LGBTQ+ ...
the Stonewall Inn is a New York State historic site. A plaque on the facade of the building identifies it as a place associated with “monumental change for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender ...
On the National Park Service website, the acronym LGBTQ+ has been shortened to LGB, standing for lesbian, gay and bisexual.
But by Thursday the site said: “Before the 1960s, almost everything about living openly as a lesbian, gay, bisexual (LGB) person was illegal.” The Stonewall National Monument park in Greenwich ...