The Stonewall reader

Book - 2019

"For the fiftieth anniversary of the Stonewall uprising, an anthology chronicling the tumultuous fight for LGBTQ rights in the 1960s and the activists who spearheaded it, with a foreword by Edmund White. June 28, 2019 marks the fiftieth anniversary of the Stonewall uprising, which is considered the most significant event in the gay liberation movement, and the catalyst for the modern fight for LGBTQ rights in the United States. Drawing from the New York Public Library's archives, The Stonewall Reader is a collection of first accounts, diaries, periodic literature, and articles from LGBTQ magazines and newspapers that documented both the years leading up to and the years following the riots. Most importantly the anthology spotlight...s both iconic activists who were pivotal in the movement, such as Sylvia Rivera, co-founder of Street Transvestites Action Revolutionaries (STAR), as well as forgotten figures like Ernestine Eckstein, one of the few out, African American, lesbian activists in the 1960s. The anthology focuses on the events of 1969, the five years before, and the five years after. Jason Baumann, the NYPL coordinator of humanities and LGBTQ collections, has edited and introduced the volume to coincide with the NYPL exhibition he has curated on the Stonewall uprising and gay liberation movement of 1969"--

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Subjects
Published
[New York] : Penguin Books 2019.
Language
English
Corporate Author
New York Public Library
Corporate Author
New York Public Library (editor)
Other Authors
Edmund White, 1940- (writer of foreword)
Physical Description
xxv, 304 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages xxiii-xxv, 296-298).
ISBN
9780143133513
  • Foreword
  • Introduction
  • Suggestions for Further Exploration
  • Acknowledgments
  • The Stonewall Reader
  • Before Stonewall
  • Audre Lorde, from Zami: A New Spelling of My Name
  • John Rechy, from City of Night
  • Joan Nestle, from A Restricted Country
  • Del Martin and Phyllis Lyon, from "Lesbians United"
  • Franklin Kameny, from Gay Is Good
  • Virginia Prince, "The How and Why of Virginia"
  • Samuel R. Delany, from The Motion of Light in Water
  • Barbara Gittings, from The Gay Crusaders
  • Ernestine Eckstein, from "Interview with Ernestine"
  • Judy Grahn, "The Psychoanalysis of Edward the Dyke"
  • Mario Martino, from Emergence: A Transsexual Autobiography
  • Craig Rodwell, from The Gay Crusaders
  • During Stonewall
  • Dick Leitsch, "The Hairpin Drop Heard Around the World"
  • Thomas Lanigan-Schmidt, "1969 Mother Stonewall and the Golden Rats"
  • Howard Smith, "View from Inside: Full Moon over the Stonewall"
  • Lucian Truscoft IV, "View from Outside: Gay Power Comes to Sheridan Square"
  • Mark Segal, from And Then I Danced
  • Morry Manford, from Interview with Eric Marcus
  • Marsha P. Johnson and Randy Wicker, from Interview with Eric Marcus
  • Sylvia Rivera, from Interview with Eric Marcus
  • Martin Boyce, from Oral History Interview with Eric Marcus
  • Edmund White, from City Boy
  • Holly Woodlawn, from A Low Life in High Heels
  • Jayne County, from Man Enough to Be a Woman
  • Jay London Toole, from New York City Trans Oral History Project Interview with Theodore Kerr and Ahram J. Lewis
  • Miss Major Griffin-Gracy, from New York City Trans Oral History Project Interview with Abram J. Lewis
  • After Stonewall
  • Martha Shelley, from "Gay Is Good"
  • Karla Jay, from Tales of the Lavender Menace
  • Steven F. Dansky, "Hey Man"
  • Harry Hay, from Radically Cay
  • Rev. Troy D. Perry, from The Lord Is My Shepherd and He Knows I'm Gay
  • Perry Brass, "We Did It!"
  • Jeanne Cordova, from When We Were Outlaws
  • Marsha P. Johnson, from Interview with Allen Young, "Rapping with a Street Transvestite Revolutionary"
  • Kiyoshi Kuromiya, from Philadelphia LGBT History Project Interview with Marc Stein
  • Joel Hall, "Growing Up Black and Gay"
  • Tommi Avicolli Mecca, "Brushes with Lily Law"
  • Penny Arcade, from Bitch! Dyke! Faghag! Whore!
  • Jill Johnston, from Lesbian Nation
  • John E. Fryer, MD, from "John E. Fryer, MD, and the Dr. H. Anonymous Episode"
  • Jonathan Ned Katz, from Gay American History
  • Arthur Evans, from Witchcraft and the Gay Counterculture
  • Larry Mitchell, from The Faggots and Their Friends Between Revolutions
  • Chirlane McCray, "I Am a Lesbian"
  • Credits
  • Appendix
Review by New York Times Review

THE PRESIDENTS: NOTED HISTORIANS RANK AMERICA'S BEST - AND WORST - CHIEF EXECUTIVES, by Brian Lamb, Susan Swain and ?-Span. (PublicAffairs, $32.) From No. 1 (Lincoln) to No. 43 (Buchanan), a ranking of every president except Donald Trump, as he's still in office. THE STONEWALL READER, edited by the New York Public Library. (Penguin Classics, paper, $18.) The Stonewall uprising, 50 years ago in June, is often seen as the start of the gay rights movement. This anthology of essays, articles, diary entries and more complicates that view by situating the protest in historical context. BECOME AMERICA: CIVIC SERMONS ON LOVE, RESPONSIBILITY, and democracy, by Eric Liu. (Sasquatch Books, $24.95.) A White House speechwriter under President Clinton, who now organizes secular "faith gatherings" to promote civics and democracy, collects his talks on patriotism, identity, responsibility and more. ON DEMOCRACY,by E. B. White. (Harper/HarperCollins, $24.99.) Decades before Liu, the essayist and children's book author White (best known for "Charlotte's Web") also thought eloquently about democracy and its demands, as this anthology shows. FLOYD HARBOR: STORIES, by Joel Mowdy. (Catapult, paper, $16.95.) Mowdy's gritty debut collection of linked stories is set in a rundown community on eastern Long Island, with characters struggling to overcome poverty and trauma.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [June 2, 2019]
Review by Booklist Review

Whether you call it a riot or an uprising, an event that took place on June 28, 1969, was seminal. That was the night when customers of the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in New York's Greenwich Village, fought back against a police raid, helping to usher in an age of LGBTQ liberation. Now, on the fiftieth anniversary of Stonewall, editor Jason Baumann, assistant director for collection development and coordinator of humanities and LGBT collections at the New York Public Library, has combed the LGBTQ archives of the NYPL to offer this generous and eclectic assortment of writings about the historic event. The selection is divided into three sections: Before, During, and After Stonewall. The Before section, featuring writing by such well-known figures as authors John Rechy, Audre Lorde, and Samuel R. Delany, provides much-needed context. The During section, which offers detailed, first-person accounts of the night, will probably be of greatest interest to readers, though the third section, After, offers a mini-course in the history of the years immediately following Stonewall. This significant book does welcome justice to an event that author Edmund White, who wrote the foreword, says sparked an oceanic change in thinking. --Michael Cart Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This expansive collection of documents from the New York Public Library's LGBTQ history archive constructs a vital and dynamic narrative of the early days of gay liberation through the words of activists, writers, and other eyewitnesses. The book follows the movement through the years just before Stonewall, the event itself, and the years after. Plenty of the essays and excerpts are not specifically about Stonewall, but provide a broader picture of inequality and persecution, as with the salacious press coverage of trans woman Christine Jorgensen's transition. The riots are revisited from multiple perspectives: in one piece, activist and journalist Dick Leitsch recounts the events in more or less direct prose; the following piece, by a former Stonewall patron, more lyrically describes the incident as "Mother Stonewall giving birth to a new era." This collection is significant for its inclusion of essays and selections from memoir that provide a more intimate understanding of the movement's history. In a selection from Karla Jay's memoir, the activist recalls protesting homophobia in the feminist community, and an interview with Kiyoshi Kuromiya explores the misogyny and racism in the early stages of the LGBTQ movement. This window into the daily lives of activists and ordinary people fighting passionately against injustice is illuminating and inspiring. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

The New York Public Library (NYPL), with a foreword by Edmund White (A Boy's Own Story), compiles experiences of LGBTQ Americans. Divided into three sections, this curated collection brings the Stonewall uprising to life. White sets the stage, noting the cultural context for the narratives which follow, while NYPL's Jason Baumann contributes an introduction further explaining historical, geographical, and scholarly context. Beginning with "Before Stonewall," readers are treated to excerpts from movement organizers such as Audre Lorde, Christine Jorgensen, and Ernestine Eckstein. These pieces expand on what life was like for the LGBTQ community prior to the Stonewall rebellion. The collection then moves to "During Stonewall," in which selections describe the event from various perspectives, including that of journalist Dick Leitsch, activist Marsha P. Johnson, and journalist Howard Smith. Finally, "After Stonewall" provides a look at how things changed or did not change post-riots, with words from Rev. Troy D. Perry, author Kiyoshi Kuromiya, and New York's first lady Chirlane McCray. VERDICT As a whole, this masterful collection is perhaps one of the most exhaustive looks at the events surrounding Stonewall from the LGBTQ perspective and provides a wonderfully diverse cast of voices. Scholars will find plenty of quotable material.-Abby Hargreaves, Dist. of Columbia P.L. © Copyright 2019. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A showcase of the work of activists and participants in the Stonewall uprising, published to coincide with the 50th anniversary.With his discerning selections, editor Baumann (editor: Love and Resistance: Out of the Closet into the Stonewall Era, 2019, etc.)assistant director for collection development for the New York Public Library and coordinator of the library's LGBT Initiativeprovides a street-level view of the Stonewall uprising, which helped launch the LGBTQ rights movement in the United States. Through his skillful curation, he offers a corrective for what is too often a sanitized, homogenous, and whitewashed portrayal of academics and professionals about the event sometimes termed "the hairpin drop heard around the world." By gathering vibrant and varied experiences of diverse contributors, the collection reflects the economic, gender, racial, and ethnic complexity of the LGBTQ community at a time when behaviors such as same-sex dancing were criminalized. Featuring essays, interviews, personal accounts, and news articles, Baumann's archival project accurately and meticulously captures an era of social unrest; the conversation about institutional discrimination and inequality presented here remains as revolutionary today as it did 50 years ago. The anthology invites us to look closely at the unresolved social dynamics of a population defined by its diversity, confronting sexism, racism, classism, and internalized homophobia alongside a broad view of institutional discrimination, heteronormativity, and sexual repression. Voices of significant leaders sit beside stories from participants behind protest lines, police raids, and street harassment, and the mounting frustration with an oppressive status quo becomes palpable on every page. The first-person narratives collected here effectively spotlight the social inequalities surrounding the LGBTQ community, many of which persist today.A bold rallying cry that should help in the continuing fight for LGBTQ rights. Read alongside Baumann's Love and Resistance and Marc Stein's The Stonewall Riots: A Documentary History for a full education on the events before, during, and after Stonewall. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Introduction   Twenty-five years ago, the New York Public Library presented the exhibition Becoming Visible: The Legacy of Stonewall , cu- rated by Molly McGarry and Fred Wasserman, as well as an accompanying catalog. Planned to commemorate Stonewall 25, it was the first exhibition devoted to LGBTQ history by a major New York cultural institution. It had the highest atten- dance of any NYPL exhibition except the Dead Sea Scrolls. In my years working on LGBTQ collections at the library, I have had countless people tell me that the exhibition changed their lives because it was the first time they felt that their history was publicly embraced and treated with the seriousness it deserved. The exhibition was an opportunity to show the riches of the library's LGBTQ archives, which had then recently been ac- quired by farsighted curators in partnership with grassroots activists. Now with the fiftieth anniversary of Stonewall, the library is able to open those archives through this anthology to give contemporary readers insight into this pivotal era in LGBTQ history through firsthand accounts of the actual participants. The Stonewall Inn, located at 53 Christopher Street in New York City, began as a teahouse, Bonnie's Stone Wall, in 1930, and later evolved into a restaurant. After a fire destroyed the interior in the early 1960s, the Stonewall was reopened by Fat Tony Lauria as a gay bar in 1967. Part of a network of Mafia-controlled, illegal gay clubs and after-hours joints in the Village (like the Bon Soir, the Tenth of Always, and Kooky's), the Stonewall was operated as a private club, rather than a pub- licly open bar, to evade the control of the State Liquor Author- ity. Every weekend patrons paid three dollars and signed the club register--often as Judy Garland or Donald Duck--to get into the Stonewall, drink watered-down liquor, and dance to the music of the Ronettes and the Shangri-Las. Despite the burnt interior, dirty glasses, and surly staff, the Stonewall-- one of the few gay clubs in the Village where patrons could dance--drew a devoted young clientele. Many cross-dressed, wearing makeup or their own personal mix of men's and women's attire. The police routinely raided the Stonewall, but the management, always mysteriously tipped off in advance, would turn up the lights to warn the crowd to stop any open displays of affection, slow dancing, or use of illicit drugs. According to most historians, the Stonewall's management bribed the police for protection, and the raids were merely for show. But on Tuesday, June 24, 1969, there was another kind of raid, orga- nized by the NYPD's First Division, rather than the usual and local Sixth Precinct. When the club was back up and running a few days later, the police decided to go in again on Friday, June 27, and shut it down for good. The police were accustomed to handling a large gay crowd with only a handful of officers, but this night the raid went very differently. Rather than leave, a crowd of patrons and on- lookers gathered in front of the bar and waited for their friends held inside to be released. When the police van came to take away those who had been arrested, the crowd fought back, forcing the police into the bar. The riot gathered force from onlookers, who turned on the barricaded bar with garbage cans and fire. The drag queens were said to have given the po- lice both the fiercest resistance and a dose of humor, facing them down in a chorus line as they sang, "We are the Stone- wall Girls . . ." The crowd was controlled and dispersed in the early hours of Saturday morning, only to reemerge later that night as several thousand people took to the streets chanting, "Gay power!" and "Liberate Christopher Street!" Riots and demonstrations continued throughout the following week. In the end, the arrests and damage were minimal. What shocked both gays and the straight establishment was that queers had openly fought back. That is the story in a nutshell. Everything else has become the stuff of queer legend and debate. First, we cannot agree on what to call this series of events. Was it a "riot" or an "uprising"? The activists and reporters at the time called it a riot, eager to compare it to the many other historic riots of the 1960s, such as those against racial oppression in Watts, New- ark, Detroit, and Harlem. Many later historians and critics have preferred to call it an uprising, insisting either that the level of violence and the size of the crowd did not warrant the use of the term riot or, conversely, that calling it a riot denigrated the importance of the events. Stonewall is often marked as the beginning of the LGBTQ civil rights movement, but that is of course not true. LGBTQ people had been organizing politically since at least the 1950s, with the emergence of organizations such as the Mattachine Society, the Daughters of Bilitis, the Janus Society, the Society for Individual Rights, and the Erickson Educational Foundation. Although these organizations were small, there were chapters of the fledgling groups across the United States by the mid-1960s. These organizations had magazines and conventions, and even staged demonstrations at the Pentagon, the White House, and Philadelphia's In- dependence Hall. Some say that Stonewall was the first time LGBTQ people fought back, which is also not true. Stonewall was preceded by earlier queer revolts such as the Cooper Do- nuts Riot in Los Angeles in 1959, the Dewey's restaurant sit-in in Philadelphia in 1965, the Compton's Cafeteria Riot in San Francisco in 1966, and the protests against the raid of the Black Cat Tavern in Los Angeles in 1967, among many others. Scholars, participants, and the interested public also debate how many days the uprising lasted and who threw the first brick, the first bottle, or the first punch. And more, beyond any of these questions we wonder what these events that transpired fifty years ago mean to us today. With all these contradictions, scholars and documentarians have struggled to sort out the truth. In his pioneering account, Stonewall , historian Martin Duberman provides an inside view of the lead-up to and impact of the uprising through the lives of six LGBTQ activists. David Carter, in his thorough history, Stonewall: The Riots That Sparked the Gay  Revolution , painstakingly compares the testimony of eyewitnesses in order to reconstruct the events. They have been followed by numerous documentarians and everyday people who have tried to piece together what happened, why, and what it ulti- mately means for LGBTQ people and the world. Rather than provide another closed narrative of these tumultuous events, my purpose with this anthology has been to allow the reader to sort these mysteries out for themselves by reading the memoirs and testimony of the participants and those immediately touched by these historic events. The anthology has been organized into three main sections: before, during, and after the Stonewall uprising. In the "Before Stonewall" section, I have attempted to provide a range of narratives that give insight into what it felt like to be LGBTQ in the 1950s and '60s, as well as give an inkling of the range of activism that was emerging across the country before the up- rising. We have focused on but not limited ourselves to New York City. Given the tremendous range of stories, this selection cannot be representative, but only hopes to demonstrate a breadth of experiences and introduce some key LGBTQ politi- cal figures of the time, such as Barbara Gittings, Frank Kameny, and Del Martin, as well as some possibly less well-known figures such as Ernestine Eckstein and Mario Martino. There are many challenges to producing an anthology like this one, the first being copyright. So many LGBTQ texts of the midtwentieth century are in publishing limbo. The texts are protected by copyright but have no clear representation that can authorize republishing them. This is particularly true of LGBTQ magazines, which were the main avenue for commu- nication and community building. But an even greater challenge has been the way the LGBTQ archives we have inherited have already been structured by the exclusion from the record of the voices of people of color. The movement's own choice of the Stonewall uprising as a symbol for LGBTQ struggles for liberation has in many ways skewed the story to focus on the experiences of urban gay white men. In this anthology, I have endeavored to shift the narrative to a wider context and to ex- pand what does and doesn't count as a Stonewall memory. In order to understand this era, we have to understand that the history of sexuality and gender does not follow an even and upward march of progress toward freedom. Throughout history there have been cycles of freedom and repression. Same-sex relationships were discreetly tolerated in nineteenth-century America in the form of romantic friendships, but the twentieth century brought increasing legal and medical regulation of homosexuality, which was considered a dangerous illness. At the same time, there was increasing societal awareness of and anxiety about transgender and gender-nonconforming people as it became medically possible for people to transition. This change in attitude was accompanied by pockets of resis- tance, spaces that gays, lesbians, and trans people carved out for their self-expression. Sometimes these spaces were hidden, like the bars in Greenwich Village and Harlem that were frequented only by those in the know. Sometimes they were in plain sight, like the homoerotic subtexts and in-jokes of Hollywood movies. The repression of homosexuality reached its peak in the 1950s with the McCarthy era. During the paranoia of the Cold War, gay men and lesbians were seen as a corrupt lurking menace, easily used as pawns by communists. Gays and lesbians began to organize during the 1950s with the homophile movement but were hampered by the lack of a political language with which to express their experience, as they were neither a class nor an ethnicity but instead were con- sidered victims of a moral and medical defect. The activists of this era fought for civil rights framed as inclusion in the society at large, focusing on employment rights and military service. As LGBTQ people struggled to organize and represent them- selves, the United States was torn by a succession of political struggles--the African American civil rights movement, the women's movement, protests against the Vietnam War, and the emergence of the hippie youth subculture--that trans- formed the possibilities of political organizing in the United States. The narratives in this first section speak to this mix of repression and resistance, as well the growing range of politi- cal forces inspiring LGBTQ communities. In the second section, I attempt to provide the wide range of memories of the Stonewall uprising itself. Who exactly was and was not at the Stonewall uprising is probably the most debated question in both the scholarship and popular opinion. Even the eyewitnesses disagree about who was there. Given that the event took place over more than five days and involved thousands of people, we will probably never know definitively who was there. For this reason, I have not attempted to police these narratives. I have taken witnesses at their word that they were there. The section begins with the news reportage of the events: Mattachine activist Dick Leitsch's account, "The Hairpin Drop Heard Around the World," which ran in the New York Mattachine Newsletter ; and the reportage by Howard Smith and Lucian Truscott IV, which ran in the Village Voice . These articles were key in framing the events for the public and appear to have structured participants' memories as well. There then follows a wide range of testimony about the upris- ing from possibly familiar figures such as Marsha P. Johnson, Sylvia Rivera, Martin Boyce, and Thomas Lanigan-Schmidt, as well as LGBTQ figures we might not realize were personally touched by the Stonewall uprising, such as Holly Woodlawn and Jayne County. In order to preserve the voices of the sub- jects, transcriptions remain faithful to the original interviews as much as possible, only correcting errors in spelling or punc- tuation in the transcriptions. If the Stonewall uprising was not the beginning of LGBTQ political activism and not the first time LGBTQ people fought back against police repression, then why was it singled out as a defining moment in our history? The stories of the partici- pants make it clear that it marked the convergence of homophile-era activism with the energy and vision of the civil rights, antiwar, and counterculture movements that were transforming the country. The patrons at the Stonewall weren't card-carrying Mattachine members. They were inspired by the many resistances to accepted authority that were taking place in the culture at large. Although the Stonewall uprising was spontaneous, it was used by both seasoned and new LGBTQ activists as a symbol of a new revolution. The small flames of resistance that LGBTQ activists had been tending and fanning for decades finally erupted into a mass political movement. In the final section of this book, I provide a selection of personal accounts of the years following Stonewall and the tremendous explosion of activist energy that resulted from the uprising. I have included memoirs and manifestos by LGBTQ activists in New York City as well as in Los Angeles, Chicago, and Philadelphia. Today's LGBTQ movement grew out of the activist organizations that emerged in the fertile and tumultu- ous year that followed Stonewall. Organizations such as the Gay Liberation Front, Gay Activists Alliance, and the Radicalesbians quickly sprang up in the wake of the uprising and tackled LGBTQ activism in a whole new way. Rather than struggle merely for societal acceptance, they called for a com- plete transformation of the society as a whole, demanding not just equality but liberation. Veteran activists pursued their work with a renewed courage and tenacity, tackling oppressive insti- tutions such as the psychiatric profession. The emerging political movements all sent small groups of activists on road trips to spread the word. Activists around the country were inspired by the emerging revolutionary vision in LGBTQ politics and quickly adopted its new language. Chapters sprang up across the country, and many outlived the original groups in New York City. These groups in turn fought for civil rights and lib- eration in their home communities. The 1970s became a gay and lesbian renaissance with its own literature, music, poli- tics, and erotic presence. LGBTQ activists won major political victories, such as the removal of homosexuality from the American Psychiatric Association's classification of mental disorders, and began to apply public pressure to combat nega- tive stereotypes. The excitement and energy of the times are clear in these narratives, but it is also clear that the differences among LGBTQ experiences quickly became apparent in these new movements. Lesbian activists soon tired of the sexism of their gay male political colleagues. Transgender activists were in- spired by the gay liberation movement, but many gender- essentialist lesbians and gay men attempted to silence them and push them out of the movement. African American, Latina/ Latino, and Asian American activists critiqued the racism of the movement and sought to create new cultural spaces for LGBTQ people of color. Because the post-Stonewall political movements were inspired by anti-racist, feminist, and anti- imperialist politics, it was natural that these critical lenses would be used to analyze LGBTQ politics themselves. This era gave birth to political strategies, frameworks, critiques, and disagreements that continue to inform LGBTQ politics today. Clearly understanding that they were making history, these activists also recognized the need to recover the hidden history of LGBTQ people. Among the many activist groups that worked to archive this history was the International Gay Infor- mation Center (IGIC), which grew out of the History Commit- tee of the Gay Activists Alliance (GAA). The IGIC archives operated as a community-based repository until 1988, when the organization's directors gave the collection to the New York Public Library. These archives, along with other archives and collections subsequently donated to the library, comprehen- sively document the political struggles in New York City since the 1950s and have made NYPL's one of the most important archives of LGBT history in the United States. These NYPL archives have grown in the ensuing years to include the papers of pioneering activists such as Barbara Gittings, Kay Tobin Lahusen, Vito Russo, and Joseph Beam; the manuscripts of LGBTQ writers including Walt Whitman, May Sarton, and James Baldwin; as well as drag performers includ- ing Charles Pierce, Charles Busch, and Sylvester. The materials for this anthology, with two notable exceptions, have been drawn from this rich archive. The oral history archives of Eric Marcus have been an important resource for the anthology, providing the transcripts of interviews with Marsha P. John- son, Sylvia Rivera, Martin Boyce, Randy Wicker, and Morty Manford. Marcus's archive of interviews was assembled to support the writing of his book Making Gay History and lives on as the Making Gay History podcast. The library is currently partnering with the NYC Trans Oral History Project to document the lives of trans people in New York, which has made it possible to preserve and present the stories of Jay Lon- don Toole and Miss Major Griffin-Gracy. The archives of Barbara Gittings and Kay Tobin Lahusen provided the narratives of Gittings, as well as of Craig Rodwell. The rich research files of Martin Duberman supplied the narrative of Thomas Lanigan-Schmidt, as well as many pointers. Lastly, the extensive book collection in the IGIC and the LGBT periodical collection provided the bulk of the materials. When I first started working with the LGBTQ collections of the library, I just happened to be in the right place at the right time. I was an early-career librarian who had chanced to be a part of the AIDS activist organization ACT UP, as well as the gay liberation movement the Radical Faeries. The library was beginning a fund-raising initiative to help promote and pre- serve these LGBTQ history collections and needed someone who could speak to their importance. In the ensuing years it has been my tremendous privilege to meet and work with several generations of pioneering LGBTQ activists, historians, and artists, some of whom are included in this book. I have been continually humbled and awed by their visionary courage. These are people who have literally changed our world. The most important lesson that I have hopefully learned work- ing with these archives is that they are people's lives. They are not just boxes of papers and magazines; they are people's memories, hopes, and dreams that have been entrusted to us. It is my sincere hope that reading these stories will bring you closer to the generations of LGBTQ activists who precede us and that it will help to fuel future struggles for liberation.   --Jason Baumann Excerpted from The Stonewall Reader by New York Public Library Staff All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.