The National Parks Service removed all references to transgender people on its website about the Stonewall Inn National Monument this week.
References to transgender people have been removed from a National Park Service website for the Stonewall National Monument.
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 were central to the movement for LGBTQ+ rights.
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 National Park Service has removed all mentions of the words "transgender" and "queer" from its web page dedicated to the Stonewall National Monument, a site that marks a landmark moment for LGBTQ rights quite literally led by transgender and gender non-conforming people.
The National Park Service eliminated references to transgender people from its Stonewall National Monument website on Thursday, which now only refers to those who are lesbian, gay and bisexual. What used to be listed as LGBTQ+, has been changed to LGB.
But on Thursday, that appears to have changed, when part of the the National Park Service-run website no longer cited transgender individuals, removing the “T” from “LGBTQ+. The “Q” and “+” were also removed.
NEW YORK — The National Park Service has removed references to transgender people from its website for the Stonewall National Monument in the wake of President Donald Trump's executive orders rolling back rights for transgender people. The Stonewall ...
The National Park Service has removed references to transgender and queer people from its website for the Stonewall National Monument, a park and visitor center in New York that commemorates a ...
The National Park Service (NPS) has removed references to trans and nonbinary individuals from its Stonewall National Monument website.