West 42nd Street (between Eighth Avenue & Broadway)
Gay Activists Alliance, Gay Liberation Front, and Radicalesbians Demonstration Against Police Harassment at Times Square
September 21, 2021
Women’s Liberation Center listed to National Register of Historic Places
March 9, 2020
Forgotten but pivotal moment in gay-rights movement took place 50 years ago in NYC
1446 First Avenue
Founding of the Gay Activists Alliance at the Arthur Bell Residence
May 28, 2019
A Gay Theater and James Baldwin’s N.Y. Apartment May Get Landmark Protection
20 Sites
Gay Activists Alliance
...the first LGBT group formed right after Stonewall. Focused exclusively on “the liberation of gay people,” GAA became the most influential American gay liberation activist organization in the early 1970s.... Learn More
April 6, 2018
An Urgent Effort to Document New York’s LGBTQ History Before It Disappears
120 East 56th Street
Gay Activists Alliance Zap at the New York Republican State Committee Headquarters
1335 Sixth Avenue
Gay Activists Alliance Zap at the Inner Circle Dinner at the New York Hilton Hotel
October 12, 2018
Celebrate LGBTQ History Month with this interactive map of historic N.Y.C. sites
June 16, 2020 | 6:30PM to 7:30PM
ZAP!: A Virtual Tour of Post-Stonewall Gay Activists Alliance (GAA) Actions
September 29, 2017
New Historic Walking Tour at Stonewall National Monument Launches Today, Connecting the Public with LGBT History
39 Whitehall Street
Picket in Front of U.S. Army Building, First-Ever U.S. Gay Rights Protest
350 Bleecker Street
Alma Routsong & Elizabeth Deran Residence / Arnie Kantrowitz Residence / Craig Rodwell Residence
West 43rd Street (Between Seventh and Eighth Avenues)
Anti-Police Brutality Protest in Response to the Blue’s Bar Raids
February 5, 2024
Dozens of NYC’s LGBTQ historic sites in the spotlight for Black History Month
June 16, 2021
New York’s gay bars are still vital, especially post-COVID, owners say | Pride and Pandemic
7 East 7th Street
Picket at the Great Hall, Cooper Union, Second-Ever U.S. Gay Rights Protest
October 16, 2017
“Why We Are Marching:” Remembering the October 1979 March on Washington
April 14, 2019 | 2:00pm-4:00pm
“Stonewall 50” Tour of Greenwich Village, with the Municipal Art Society
March 14, 2018
Earl Hall at Columbia University Listed on National Register of Historic Places
April 26, 2018
PHOTOS: LGBT advocates honor 52nd Anniversary of historic “Sip-In” with trailblazer Dick Leitsch and advocate/influencer Adam Eli
2 Fifth Avenue
Larry Kramer Residence / Edie Windsor & Dr. Thea Clara Spyer Residence
April 26, 2022
PHOTOS: Plaque Unveiled at Julius’ Bar, Commemorating History-Making Act of Civil Disobedience
Dag Hammarskjöld Plaza
Picket at Dag Hammarskjöld Plaza, Fourth-Ever U.S. Gay Rights Protest
240 Centre Street
Gay Activists Alliance Protest at New York City Police Headquarters
June 23, 2020
“Marching for Pride: The Basics,” Fact Sheet for Pride March Anniversary, Released
67 Wall Street
Gay Activists Alliance Zap at the New York City Taxi & Limousine Commission
September 14, 2022
Julius’, New York City’s oldest gay bar, is one step closer to becoming a city landmark
Grand Central Parkway & 78th Avenue
Demonstration Against LGBT Harassment in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park Tree Grove
16 East 8th Street
Founding of the New York Area Council of the Mattachine Society, Inc. at the Sam Morford Residence
110 Livingston Street
Gay Activists Alliance Zap at the New York City Board of Education
June 28, 2022
Queer Landmarks Are Everywhere—and This Group Is Working to Keep Them In Plain Sight
May 28, 2019
These Six NYC LGBTQ Historical Sites Are Being Considered for Landmark Designation
April 26, 2022
Photos: John Cameron Mitchell & More Acknowledge Julius’ Significance to LGBT Activism & History
124-130 West 43rd Street
Stephen Sondheim Theater (originally Henry Miller’s Theater)
July 20, 2023
Where have Staten Island’s LGBTQ+ bars gone? How a once-vibrant scene has shifted in the 2020s
June 26, 2018
Place and Community: An Interview with the NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project
July 20, 2023
VIDEO: NYC Pride Grand Marshal reflects on being one of nation’s first gay rights activists
220 West 43rd Street
New York Area Council of the Mattachine Society, Inc. at Avlon Studios
February 15, 2019 | 7:00pm-10:00pm
“Queer Quiz Show” with Making Gay History at New York Public Library
September 16, 2019
James Baldwin’s Home Is Now a Nationally Registered Historic Place
October 17, 2023
‘Herstory’ walking tour highlights historic lesbian sites in the Village
May 18, 2020 | 6:15PM to 7:30PM
#DamesAtHome: Virtual celebration of Caffe Cino and the Birthplace of Gay Theater
June 28, 2017
Interview: The NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project Talks Gay History and Advocacy in NYC
135-139 West 31st Street
Father Mychal F. Judge at St. Francis of Assisi Church & Friary
September 28, 2019 | 1:00pm-2:30pm
OPEN Finance: Tour of the LGBT History of Greenwich Village
18 Sites
1970s Lesbian Activism & Community
Lesbian rights activists in New York City worked to gain a voice, equal rights, and recognition within the Gay Liberation and Women’s Liberation movements, which emerged almost simultaneously in the... Learn More
June 25, 2020 | 6:30PM to 7:30PM
50 YEARS of PRIDE: Celebrating New York City’s First Pride March
April 14, 2024
LGBTQ New Yorkers and electeds urge CB5 to condemn anti-trans education council resolution
26 Sites
Gay-Owned Businesses
...restaurants, bathhouses, self-defense centers, and bookshops. Sites such as Isaia NYC Fashion House, F.W.I.L. Lundy Brothers Restaurant, and the Modulightor Building housed businesses that were owned and operated by gay... Learn More
June 30, 2016
NYC Pride: Tracing the History of NYC’s Gay Neighborhoods from Past to Present
May 5, 2019
Project Consults on Upcoming Exhibition Highlighting LGBTQ Nightlife and Activism
May 28, 2019
6 New York City LGBTQ landmarks might be created to keep the city’s queer history alive
September 27, 2023 | 6 PM
Building Stonewall: Past, Present & Future, with Build Out Alliance
June 29, 2021 | 6:00PM to 7:30PM
From the Queen City to the Big Apple: LGBTQ Historical Connections in WNY and NYC
February 13, 2024
Steve Ostrow, who founded famed NYC bathhouse the Continental Baths, dies at 91
23 Beekman Place
Katharine Cornell & Guthrie McClintic Residence / Paul Rudolph Residence
February 28, 2019
Threat to Club Langston Underscores Risks to LGBT-Dedicated Venues in Brooklyn
April 15, 2019
Leaders in LGBTQ History Documentation, Interpretation, and Outreach Create Stonewall 50 Factsheet
February 16, 2024
Steve Ostrow, who founded famed NYC bathhouse the Continental Baths, dies at 91
August 15, 2018
Elmhurst corner co-named for Latino activist added to interactive map of historic LGBT sites
September 14, 2017
It’s Unanimous: Caffe Cino listed on the NY State Register of Historic Places
March 1, 2019
With Bum Bum Bar Closed, Only Three Lesbian Bars Remain in New York City
486 Greenwich Street
Geoffrey Hendricks, Brian Buczak & Sur Rodney (Sur) Residence & Studio
15 Sites
Bar Raids & Forced Closures
In the 19th and 20th centuries, gay and lesbian bars and clubs were subject to various oppressive forms of social control. At first, there were the police and religiously-affiliated individuals... Learn More
September 12, 2019
James Baldwin NYC residence added to National Register of Historic Places
149-155 Christopher Street
Village AIDS Memorial at St. Veronica’s Roman Catholic Church
226-236 West 46th Street
Richard Rodgers Theater (originally Chanin’s 46th Street Theater)
November 6, 2022
NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project honored with award for ‘making a once invisible history visible’
13 Sites
Lesbian Life Before Stonewall
...politics and the arts long before the women’s liberation movement of the 1970s. This curated collection includes the residences of pioneering lesbians as well as important early lesbian social spaces.... Learn More
24 Sites
Activism Outside Manhattan
While much of the narrative of LGBT activism and liberation has long been focused on Manhattan, the other four boroughs also have important sites that help contextualize the broader movement... Learn More
June 16, 2021
Pride Month: NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project ‘Making An Invisible History Visible’
November 17, 2022
Testimony in Support of the Proposed Designation of the Julius’ Bar Building as a New York City Landmark
June 2, 2021
Interactive map reveals lesser-known landmarks in Queens’ LGBTQ rights movement June 29, 2020
May 14, 2018
Project takes NYC’s LGBT history out of the closet, and into the spotlight
November 5, 2018
Groundbreaking Study to Identify and Evaluate Historic LGBT Sites in NYC
April 21, 2020 | 6:00PM to 8:00PM
#StayHomeSipIn: Music, Cocktails & Conversation for the Julius’ “Sip-In”
April 6, 2019 | 1:00pm-5:00pm
Stonewall 50: Defining LGBTQ Site Preservation, at Columbia’s Earl Hall
September 16, 2019
James Baldwin’s former Upper West Side home receives national landmark status
November 27, 2023
The Project’s Amanda Davis Testifies in Support of Paul Rudolph Landmark Designation
April 1, 2024
Bernie Wagenblast, out trans ‘voice of the subway,’ rolls out podcast and visibility campaign
100-01 Northern Boulevard
Langston Hughes Community Library and Cultural Center, Queens Public Library
June 24, 2021
Initiative uncovers historical sites linked to the LGBTQ+ movement across New York City
170 West 130th Street
National Headquarters for the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom
20 Sites
Pre-20th Century History
Documentation of gay men and lesbians living and socializing in New York City dates back well over 150 years. By 1859, the renowned poet Walt Whitman became known for his... Learn More
11 Sites
Brooklyn Heights
Brooklyn Heights became known as a center of gay life beginning in the 1920s. This collection highlights the neighborhood’s LGBT history through residences of notable LGBT figures, gay cruising areas,... Learn More
13 Sites
Downtown Arts Scene
...the 1980s, in particular, a number of residences and studios there were associated with a network of gay visual artists who often drew inspiration from each other and the neighborhoods... Learn More
20 Sites
Homophobia & Transphobia
...to discrimination and gay-biased murders over the decades. It also includes sites where LGBT people have fought back against homophobia and/or transphobia by forming organizations and protesting, picketing, and demonstrating... Learn More
November 3, 2017
Caffe Cino Recommended for State and National Registers of Historic Places
11 Sites
The AIDS Crisis
In 1981, a “rare cancer” first seen in a group of gay men primarily in New York and San Francisco eventually became a widespread epidemic more accurately known as acquired... Learn More
181-189 Second Avenue
Peter Hujar Residence & Studio / David Wojnarowicz Residence & Studio
April 10, 2024
Research to Document LGBT History of NYC’s Hotel Chelsea Receives Award From National Park Service
March 24, 2021 | 6:30PM to 7:30PM
MAKING A KILLING: 34th Anniversary of ACT UP’s First Protest
May 28, 2019