overview

Many New York City public schools are named in honor of prominent figures in American and world history.

Abraham Lincoln Public School 7, in Brooklyn, inadvertently honors an LGBT individual.

Header Photo
Credit: Google Maps.

History

Many New York City public schools are named in honor of prominent figures in American and world history. The NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project compiled a list of the 25 public schools named after gay men, lesbians, and bisexuals, although only one — Harvey Milk High School — intentionally honors an LGBT individual. This list includes Abraham Lincoln Public School 7, in Brooklyn.

Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865) was the 16th President of the United States (1861-1865), during which time he presided over the Civil War, succeeding in maintaining the union of the states and abolishing slavery. He is consistently listed as one of the greatest U.S. Presidents. Born in Kentucky, he was self-educated and became a lawyer and Illinois state legislator and Congressman, prior to running for President. Lincoln was martyred by assassination just after the end of the war.

Lincoln was married at age 33 to Mary Todd and fathered four sons. There has been much interest, speculation, and research about Lincoln’s sexuality, however, since at least 1926 by poet Carl Sandberg in his biography of the President. In particular, there has been much analysis of Lincoln’s relationship as a young man with Joshua Fry Speed, who he met in 1837 and with whom he shared a bedroom until 1841 in Springfield, Illinois.

C.A. Tripp, a psychologist who worked with sexologist Alfred Kinsey in the 1950s and wrote the groundbreaking book The Homosexual Matrix (1975), among other works, began his academic research on Lincoln’s sexuality in the 1990s. In The Intimate World of Abraham Lincoln (2005), Tripp concluded that Lincoln had relationships with other men throughout his lifetime. The Lincoln-Speed relationship has inspired a number of novels, plays, and art projects.

Sites on this website associated with Lincoln include the Elmer Ephraim Ellsworth Flagpole in Christopher Park.

Entry by Jay Shockley, project director (March 2021).

NOTE: Names above in bold indicate LGBT people.

Building Information

  • Architect or Builder: unknown
  • Year Built: 1999

Sources

  1. “Abraham Lincoln,” Out History, bit.ly/3trpTLW.

  2. C.A. Tripp, The Intimate World of Abraham Lincoln (New York: Basic Books, 2005).

  3. Gore Vidal, “Was Lincoln Bisexual?,” Vanity Fair, January 3, 2005.

  4. “Honest Abe,” Teaching History, bit.ly/39IgOXi.

  5. Hrag Vartanian, “The Bed Where Lincoln Slept with Another Man,” Hyperallergic, February 21, 2014, bit.ly/3pLxbb7.

  6. Lewis Gannett, “C. A. Tripp’s Journey to Lincoln,” The Gay and Lesbian Review, March 1, 2005, bit.ly/2EWQ7z3.

  7. Mark Segal, “Abraham Lincoln: A Life in the Closet?,” Washington Blade, October 25, 2011, bit.ly/2Tom248.

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