A state park in New York was renamed yesterday in honor of legendary trans activist Marsha P. Johnson.
In an
announcement yesterday – which would have been Johnson’s 75th birthday – New
York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) said that the East River State Park in Brooklyn will
now officially be known as the Marsha P. Johnson State Park.
“Too often,
the marginalized voices that have pushed progress forward in New York and
across the country go unrecognized, making up just a fraction of our public
memorials and monuments,” Cuomo
said in a statement. He originally announced the plans to rename
the park this past February.
“Marsha P.
Johnson was one of the early leaders of the LGBTQ movement and is only now
getting the acknowledgment she deserves. Dedicating this state park for her,
and installing public art telling her story, will ensure her memory and her
work fighting for equality lives on.”
“New York is
the proud birthplace of the LGBTQ rights movement with the Stonewall Uprising
more than 50 years ago,” said Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) in a statement. “Today,
we dedicate the first State Park in New York in recognition of an LGBTQ hero –
Marsha P. Johnson. The Marsha P. Johnson State Park honors the transgender
woman of color, who led the fight for equal rights and justice for all.”
“With the
COVID-19 pandemic and Black Lives Matter movement, now more than ever we must
continue the fight for LGBTQ equality and racial justice in our society.”
The governor’s
website has several renderings of what the park will look like after it has
been revamped to reflect “Marsha’s style and colors.”
Johnson was a
sex worker, a drag performer, and an activist for LGBTQ, HIV, and other causes
in the 1960s, 70s, and 80s. With Sylvia Rivera, she co-founded the organization
Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries (STAR), which provided support for
young transgender, non-binary, and queer youth in New York City.
She is best
known today for the role she played in the Stonewall Riots in 1969. David
Carter’s book on Stonewall, Stonewall: The Riots That Sparked the Gay
Revolution, named her as one of “three individuals known to have been in
the vanguard” of the demonstrations against the police at the mafia-run gay
bar.
A year later,
Johnson would march in the first Pride, but in 1973 she and Rivera were banned
from the yearly demonstration because they “weren’t gonna allow drag queens,”
who organizers said were “giving them a bad name,” according to the
documentary Pay It No Mind – The Life and Times of Marsha P. Johnson.
In the 80s,
she demonstrated with ACT-UP.
In 1992, her
body was found in the Hudson River. Police ruled her death a suicide, but the
people who knew her have expressed doubt that she died by suicide and noted
that she faced constant homophobic, transphobic, and racist harassment and that
police ignored witnesses who saw her being harassed just before her death.
SOURCE: LGBTQ NATION
Best news ever. We needed some good news. Thanks for sharing this. Why isn't this being heralded in the national news?
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