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Primary Source Sets
Stonewall and Its Impact on the Gay Liberation Movement
A 2014 article about the National Park Service’s decision to commemorate significant sites from LGBT history.

A 2014 article about the National Park Service’s decision to commemorate significant sites from LGBT history.

In 2014, at Stonewall Inn in New York City, State Interior Secretary Sally Jewell announced that the National Park Service would start marking places of significance to the history of lesbian, gay, transgender, and bisexual Americans. The Park Service convened a panel of scholars who identified sites important to LGBT history. The sites were then evaluated for inclusion on the National Register of Historic Places, designation as national historic landmarks, or consideration as national monuments. The effort, part of the National Park Service’s “Telling All Americans’ Stories,” culminated in 2016 with the LGBTQ Heritage Initiative, which included sixty-two landmarks and seven parks, the Stonewall National Monument among them. More information can be found at the NPS website under LGBTQ Heritage.

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Citation Information
Associated Press, “National Park Service to mark LGBT historical sites,” Digital Public Library of America, https://dp.la/item/b54abc65284bad80725b8cee0b2dc2c2.
Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.
Courtesy of Minnesota Public Radio via Minnesota Digital Library.

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Item 15 of 15 in the Primary Source Set Stonewall and Its Impact on the Gay Liberation Movement

Previous Item
An excerpt from a 1958 radio program discussing gay people in the US.
A letter from Phil Johnson to Circle of Friends board members outlining the history of the organization.
A photograph of the window of the Stonewall Inn in New York City, 1969.
A photograph of the Gay Liberation Front picketing Time, Inc., in 1969.
The Gay Liberation Front platform statement, December 2, 1970.
A photograph of Gay Liberation Front members at a demonstration with a poster saying “Sappho was a right-on woman.”
A radio interview with a lesbian named Chris about her identity and politics, 1972.
An excerpt from a 1978 debate about California Proposition 6, an effort to ban gay men and women from working in California public schools.
A 1985 letter from Don Baker, a gay rights activist, to Dallas City Councilwoman Lori Palmer regarding gay rights.
A Stonewall GLBT button.
A 1990 press release announcing that black leaders had met to “discuss lesbian/gay issues.”
A pamphlet for the twentieth anniversary of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, 1994.
Excerpts from a 2000 research article titled “Changing Social Attitudes in the United States: Increasing Acceptance of Homosexuals.”
A 2011 article about the legalization of same-sex marriage in New York State.
A 2014 article about the National Park Service’s decision to commemorate significant sites from LGBT history.

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