StonewallBrochure |
Official Brochure of Stonewall National Monument (NM) in New York. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
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force were often paid off in return for information about
planned raids. Customers caught in a raid were routinely
freed, but only after being photographed and humiliated.
In the early hours of June 28,1969, people fought back.
A Movement Takes Shape
"There was no out, there was just in."
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On June 28, 1969, New
York City police officers
raided the Stonewall Inn.
Following what at first appeared to be a routine raid, a
crowd gathered outside to watch for friends in the bar. But
as police vans came to haul away those arrested, the crowd
became angry, began throwing objects, and attempted
to block the way. The crowd's aggression forced police to
retreat and barricade themselves inside the Stonewall Inn.
Onlookers joined in and attacked the bar with pennies,
metal garbage cans, bricks, bottles, an uprooted parking meter,
and burning trash. The confrontation grew as the fire
department and the NYPD's Tactical Patrol Force, trained for
riot control, joined police reinforcements sent to the scene.
Through the 1960s almost everything about living openly as
a lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender (LGBT) person was a
violation of law, rule, or policy. New York City's prohibitions
against homosexual activities were particularly harsh. People
were arrested for wearing fewer than three articles of clothing
that matched their sex. Serving alcoholic beverages to homosexuals was prohibited. For married men and women who lived
homosexual lives in secret, blackmail was a constant threat.
Discrimination and fear were tools to isolate people when homosexuality was hidden. After Stonewall, being "out and proud" in
numbers was a key strategy that strengthened the movement.
Street kids, who were
among the first to fight,
Uprising
were joined by people
Stonewall was a milestone for LGBT civil rights that provided
momentum for a movement. In the early hours of June 28,
1969, a police raid on the Stonewall Inn provoked a spontaneous act of resistance that earned a place alongside
landmarks in American self-determination such as Seneca
Falls Convention for women's rights (1848) and the Selma
to Montgomery March for African American voting rights
(1965). Demonstrations continued over the next several
nights at Christopher Park across from the Stonewall Inn
gathered outside and then
by supporters flocking to
c
o
Greenwich Village as news
of the events spread.
Photo: New York Daily News
Liberate Christopher Street!
The agitated crowd took to the streets chanting "Gay
Power!" and "Liberate Christopher Street!" LGBT youth
who gathered at Christopher Park—some of them homeless
and with little social capital—challenged police, linked
arms, and formed a blockade. Police charged the crowd,
but rather than disperse, the mob retreated to the neighborhood they knew well with its network of narrow, winding
streets, doubled-back, and regrouped near the Stonewall
Inn and Christopher Park, surprising the police.
Demonstrator Tommy Schmidt described the feeling of
being in the melee: "I was part of a mob that had a kind of
were repaired. Photo: Manuscripts and Archives Division, The New York Public Library
deep identity and was acting as one force." John O'Brien said,
and in the surrounding neighborhood. When asked to
"What excited me was I finally was not alone."
describe the difference that Stonewall had made, journalist
Social change takes different forms. Pioneers organized
Eric Marcus observed that before Stonewall, "There was no
and took a range of actions and approaches in the fight for
out, there was just in."
their equality. Stonewall was a galvanizing moment that
empowered a range of advocacy; some mainstream, and
People who would identify today as LGBT had few choices
some non-conforming or militant, that rejected approaches
for socializing in public and many bars they frequented
based on assimilation.
were operated by organized crime. Members of the police
The Stonewall Inn, summer of 1969, after reopening and before the windows
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Photo: New York Daily News Archive
Photo: unknown
"By the time of Stonewall...we had fifty to sixty gay
groups in the country. A year later there were at least
fifteen hundred. By two years later, to the extent that
counts could be made, it was twenty-five hundred.
And that was the impact of Stonewall." Frank Kameny.
"And that was the impact of Stonewall:
A Word About Words...
Words trace progress of t h e LGBT m o v e m e n t . They
are intensely personal and politically p o w e r f u l . In
describing historic events, words used here are often
t h e terms of t h e times and t h e people w h o said
t h e m , even if those terms are not used today. For
example, "homophile," meaning a positive attitude
t o w a r d homosexuals, dissipated o v e r t i m e . "Transgender," dates only f r o m t h e mid-1980s a n d may
not appear in a n historic context, although many
embrace it. In some places, "LGBT" is used although
t h e people did not describe themselves t h a t way.
Stonewall was a
milestone, but it
wasn't the first stand
for LGBT rights...
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After the Uprising
After the uprising, the windows of the Stonewall Inn were boarded-up, painted black, and quickly became message boards for the
community. The Mattachine Society urged restraint while others
sought more active responses and posted notices of meetings.
Christopher Street Liberation Day
A year after the uprising, the first Christopher Street Gay Liberation
March began with a few hundred people outside the Stonewall
Inn and swelled to several thousand by the time it concluded in
Central Park. These annual marches-part celebration, community
builder, and political rally-showed LGBT people in significant
numbers and as a force that mainstream society had not previously
recognized.
Park Planning and Community Engagement
Stonewall National Monument is a new national park area
with limited services. It is a park in progress and will take shape
after public involvement. Check www.nps.gov/ston for updates
about park planning. In the coming years, services will be
added to the park in cooperation with partners.
Photo: Fred W. McDarrah
Protest
Barbara Gittings organized
the New York chapter of
the Daughters of Bilitis and
in the 1960s organized
some of the first protests
against the federal government's ban on employing
homosexuals. Gittings
helped to lobby until
the American Psychiatric
Association declassified
homosexuality as a mental
illness in 1973 saying that
her life mission was to
tear away the "shroud of
invisibility."
o
Sip-In
Inspired by civil rights sit-ins in the South, the New York City Mattachine
Society held a "sip-in" to challenge a regulation that prohibited
bars from serving gay clients. In April 1966, with reporters in tow,
activists declared they were gay and asked to be served at Julius',
a bar sympathetic to gay customers that was under observation by
authorities. Publicity from the sip-in was a catalyst to reform the
New York State Liquor Authority anti-LGBT policies.
Stonewall National Monument is a place that the LGBT community
and their allies gather in times of celebration, reflection, and
sadness. Crowds here gather to remember the victims of the
Pulse nightclub shooting in June 2016.
Photo: Big Gay Ice Cream
Employment Denied
A 1953 Executive Order banned homosexuals
from federal employment. In 1957, Franklin
(Frank) Kameny was fired as an astronomer
for the US Army Map Service for being gay.
Kameny fought dismissal and in 1951, filed the
first gay rights appeal to the US Supreme Court.
That year, Kameny co-founded the Mattachine
Society of Washington, DC with Jack Nichols,
and helped to start the National LGBTQ Task
Force and the Human Rights Campaign. He
worked to declassify homosexuality as a mental
disorder by the American Psychiatric Association
and coined the phrase "Gay is Good."
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Early Acts of Rebellion
In San Francisco's Compton's Cafeteria in 1966, officers grabbed a
transgender patron who, rather than surrendering as they expected,
instead tossed coffee on them, setting off a riot. In response, reflecting
the era's persistent treatment of homosexuality as a mental illness,
the city created a network of social, mental, and medical services followed in 1968 by the National Transsexual Counseling Unit. In 1967
a violent raid at the Black Cat Tavern in Los Angeles led to a large
demonstration days later.
Photo: Fred W. McDarrah
Fighting Back
The Mattachine Society, Philadelphia's Janus Society, and the New
York chapter of the Daughters of Bilitis held protests in front of
Independence Hall in Philadelphia on July 4, 1965 and on each of
four successive July 4ths. Protesters demanded rights for homosexual
Americans, emphasizing that a substantial number of Americans
were denied "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." Organizers
enforced a strict dress code for participants to represent homosexuals
as "presentable and employable."
Marsha P. Johnson was one of the most outspoken members of the
New York transgender community when she was targeted by police at
the Stonewall Inn and among the first to fight back.
In the early 1970s, Johnson and friend, Sylvia Rivera, co-founded STAR,
the Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries, to support young "drag
queens," trans women,
and street kids living on
the Christopher Street
docks and in STAR House
on New York's Lower East
Side. Johnson continued
street activism as an organizer with ACT UP (AIDS
Coalition to Unleash
Power).
About Your Visit
Photo by Kay Tobin ©Manuscripts and Archives Division, The New York Public Library
For a safe visit, be aware of your surroundings and cross streets
at the corners. The Stonewall Inn, across from the national
Sylvia Rae Rivera was an LGBT liberation and transgender activist. In
monument, is a private business and working bar; patrons must
addition to STAR, she was a founding member of the Gay Liberation
be 21 years old to enter.
Front and Gay Activists Alliance. Sometimes homeless herself, Rivera
Getting to the Park
focused her activism to help people she believed that mainstream
The park is bounded by Christopher, Grove, and West Fourth
society and assimilationist LGBT groups left behind, particularly
Streets. By subway, take the Broadway 1 Line-7th Avenue local
people of color.
to Christopher Street-Sheridan Square Station; or via the 7th
Avenue bus line on the M8 or M20.
More Information
www.nps.gov/ston
Stonewall National Monument is one of more than 400 parks in the
National Park System. They reflect the American experience through
natural wonders, sites of celebration, conscience, and civil rights such
as Women's Rights National Historical Park, and the Selma to Montgomery National Historic Trail. Learn more about parks and how the
National Park Service serves communities at www.nps.gov.
Photo: Manuscripts and
Archives Division, The New
York Public Library
Photo: Associated Press
Photo: Associated Press
Photo by Diana Davies, Manuscripts and
Archives Division, The New York Public Library
Photo: unknown