Stonewall National Monument Named to National Trust’s 2026 List of US’s 11 Most Endangered Historic Places

May 20, 2026

PRESS CONTACT
Ken Lustbader, NYC LGBTQ Historic Sites Project
(917) 848-1776 / k[email protected]

Federal Government Actions Threaten Monument and Devalue Contributions of LGBTQ+ Americans

MAY 20, 2026—NEW YORK, NY—The National Trust for Historic Preservation, the national advocate for historic places, has named the Stonewall National Monument in New York City to its 2026 list of America’s 11 Most Endangered Historic Places. Stonewall’s placement on the list is of concern to several of the groups that helped lead the campaign to include its story within our National Park System, including the National Parks Conservation Association, the NYC LGBTQ Historic Sites Project and Making Gay History.

Designated in 2016, the Stonewall National Monument is the first U.S. National Monument (and only unit of the National Park Service) dedicated to LGBTQ+ history. It serves as a permanent and official acknowledgment that the courage and leadership shown by the LGBTQ+ community has fundamentally advanced equality in American law, culture, and public life. However today, the Stonewall National Monument is threatened by federal actions aimed to censor and rewrite the LGBTQ+ presence in American history.

Federal actions threaten the Stonewall National Monument’s inclusive interpretation, community representation, and educational impact. Changes to the site’s interpretive materials by the federal government, including removal of the Pride flag and references to the participation of transgender people in the Stonewall Uprising, have already limited the ability to tell the full story of Stonewall and its national and global significance. Although the Pride flag has been restored after successful litigation, its removal created serious concerns about the protection of essential aspects of the site’s heritage, and altered online interpretive materials have not yet been corrected. These censorship actions continue to threaten understanding the LGBTQ+ presence in and contributions to American history.

This comes at a time when the LGBTQ+ community finds itself under sustained assault from a number of federal government actions, including the shuttering of federal websites that shared the contributions of LGBTQ+ people in American history and the present day, the removal of “T” and “Q” from acronyms to exclude those who identify as transgender and queer, the rescinding of committed federal grant funding for LGBTQ+ related projects, and the removal of rainbow flags from federal buildings.

As allies and partners prepare to celebrate the 10th anniversary designation of the National Monument, sustained advocacy is necessary to ensure that the full and accurate LGBTQ+ history of the Stonewall Uprising remains publicly visible and fully accurate. Stonewall’s history is intertwined with the history of other LGBTQ+ historic sites across the country. It is essential to maintain the full and factual story through interpretive materials at the Stonewall National Monument for all, as well as expand public interpretation and awareness about why the Stonewall Uprising matters, in order to contextualize historic LGBTQ places throughout the entire nation.

“Fifty-seven years ago it took incredible bravery for LGBTQ+ New Yorkers to stand up to the harassment from authorities that they had grown accustomed to. Today, bravery is again required to ensure the full story of the Stonewall Uprising is told at the National Monument, including the roles of transgender and gender-nonconforming people in the events of 1969.”
Carol Quillen, president and CEO, National Trust for Historic Preservation

“Stonewall National Monument, the first national monument dedicated to LGBTQ history, is a tangible reminder of the LGBTQ community’s role in shaping American culture and society. It also demonstrates the power of place to connect people to history in profound and meaningful ways. Its full story must be protected from erasure because LGBTQ people are, and always have been, part of the American experience. History gives us pride, connection, and the courage to move forward.”
Ken Lustbader, co-director, NYC LGBTQ Historic Sites Project

“The Stonewall Uprising of June 1969 changed the course of history—for LGBTQ Americans in our fight for equality and dignity, as well as our place in the American story. The Stonewall National Monument commemorates where young LGBTQ people said, ‘enough’ and fought back. Failing to preserve and amplify that history in the place where it happened would be an affront to their memories and an insult to the LGBTQ community.”
Eric Marcus, executive director, Making Gay History

“The events at Stonewall changed our history forever and continue to inspire us today. As we celebrate the 10th anniversary of Stonewall National Monument, we remain steadfast in our efforts to ensure the full, factual story continues to be represented here for all to learn and know. Censorship in our national parks is wrong. It goes against the very values of our democracy and ideals our parks represent. We will continue to make sure the Stonewall story is known, its significance celebrated and its legacy carries on.”
Kristen Sykes, Northeast Regional Director, National Parks Conservation Association

About the NYC LGBTQ Historic Sites Project
The NYC LGBTQ Historic Sites Project, launched in 2015 by preservation professionals, is an award-winning cultural heritage initiative and educational resource documenting and presenting historic sites connected to the LGBTQ community throughout New York City. Its website, including an interactive map, features over 500 diverse places from the 17th century to 2000 that are important to LGBTQ history and illustrate the community’s influence on NYC and American culture.

The project researches and nominates LGBTQ sites to the National Register, advocates for the official recognition of LGBTQ historic sites, provides walking tours (also accessible through a free-app), presents lectures, engages the community through events, develops educational programs for New York City public school students, and disseminates its content through robust social media channels. Its goal is to make an invisible history visible while fostering pride and awareness. Learn more at www.nyclgbtsites.org, and follow the Project on Instagram: @nyclgbtsites.

About Making Gay History
Making Gay History addresses the absence of substantive, in-depth LGBTQ+-inclusive American history from the public discourse and the classroom. By sharing the stories of those who helped a despised minority take its rightful place in society as full and equal citizens, we aim to encourage connection, pride, and solidarity within the LGBTQ+ community—and to provide an entry point for both allies and the general public to its largely hidden history.

With an archive of more than a hundred podcast episodes to draw from, Making Gay History (MGH) has now also partnered with the National Education Association to create lessons for educators anchored by MGH episodes to help bring LGBTQ+ history into the classroom in an engaging and accessible way.

About the National Parks Conservation Association
Since 1919, the nonpartisan National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA) has been the leading voice in safeguarding our national parks. NPCA and its more than 1.6 million members and supporters work together to protect and preserve our nation’s most iconic and inspirational places for future generations. For more information, visit www.npca.org.