Name [3][4][5][6][7][8]
|
inducted
|
Notes
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Jane Addams
|
2012
|
Illinois 1860–1935. The founder of the social work profession in the United States.
|
Alvin Ailey
|
2012
|
Texas 1931–1989. Founded the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater in NYC.
|
Reinaldo Arenas
|
2012
|
Cuba 1966–1990. Poet, novelist, and playwright.
|
James Baldwin
|
2012
|
NYC 1924–1987. Novelist, playwright, and activist.
|
Margaret Chung
|
2012
|
California 1889–1959. First Chinese-American woman physician.
|
Barbara Gittings
|
2012
|
Austria 1932–2007. Lesbian activist. Organized the New York chapter of the Daughters of Bilitis (DOB).
|
Keith Haring
|
2012
|
Pennsylvania 1958–1990. Pop artist who used his work to advocate for safer sex and AIDS awareness.
|
Barbara Jordan
|
2012
|
Texas 1936–1996. First African American elected to the Texas Senate after Reconstruction.
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Christine Jorgensen
|
2012
|
NYC 1926–1989. Traveled to Denmark for hormones and gender confirmation surgery and became a public figure on her return to the US.
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Frida Kahlo
|
2012
|
Mexico 1907–1954. Artist who painted many portraits, self-portraits and works inspired by nature.
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Alfred Kinsey
|
2012
|
New Jersey 1894–1956. Biologist and sexologist known for the Kinsey Scale.
|
Leonard Matlovich
|
2012
|
Georgia 1943–1988. First gay service member to out himself to fight the military ban on gay people.
|
Harvey Milk
|
2012
|
New York 1930–1978. First openly gay elected official in the history of California (San Francisco Board of Supervisors). Milk and San Francisco Mayor George Moscone were assassinated by Dan White.
|
Antonia Pantoja
|
2012
|
Puerto Rico 1922–2002. Educator, social worker, feminist, civil rights leader and founder of ASPIRA.
|
Bayard Rustin
|
2012
|
Pennsylvania 1912–1987. Leader in social movements, civil rights, socialism, nonviolence, gay rights.
|
Alan Turing
|
2012
|
England 1912–1954. World War II code breaker and computer scientist. Died by suicide after being convicted of "gross indecency" for a consensual sexual relationship with another man.
|
Two-Spirit people
|
2012
|
This is one of the four Historic or Social Milestones on the Legacy Walk
|
Oscar Wilde
|
2012
|
Ireland 1854–1900. Poet and playwright convicted of "gross indecency" for having sex with other men.
|
Ruth Ellis
|
2013
|
Illinois 1899–2000. African American lesbian activist and centenarian.
|
Lorraine Hansberry
|
2013
|
Illinois 1930–1965. Playwright and writer. First African American woman to have a play performed on Broadway. First Chicago native honored on the Legacy Walk [4]
|
Frank Kameny
|
2013
|
NYC 1925–2011. Gay rights activist and co-founder of the Mattachine Society. Dismissed from his position as astronomer in the army because of his homosexuality.
|
Tom Waddell
|
2013
|
New Jersey 1937–1987. Sportsman and competitor at the 1968 Summer Olympics who founded the Gay Games.
|
Walt Whitman
|
2013
|
New York 1819–1892. Poet, essayist, and journalist whose poem Leaves of Grass was described as obscene for its overt sensuality.
|
Mychal Judge
|
2014
|
New York 1933–2001. Fire Department chaplain became first certified fatality of the September 11 attacks.
|
David Kato
|
2014
|
Uganda 1964–2011. Murdered after a magazine published his photo as Uganda's first openly gay man.
|
Audre Lorde
|
2014
|
NYC 1934–1992. Black writer, feminist, womanist, and civil rights activist
|
Cole Porter
|
2014
|
Indiana 1891–1964. Composer and songwriter who won the first Tony Award for Best Musical Kiss Me, Kate.
|
Sally Ride
|
2014
|
California 1951–2012. NASA Space Shuttle Challenger astronaut, physicist, and engineer.
|
Stonewall Riots
|
2014
|
NYC 1969. This is one of the four Historic or Social Milestones on the Legacy Walk.
|
Mildred "Babe" Didrikson Zaharias
|
2014
|
Texas 1911–1956. Won two gold medals in track and field at the 1932 Summer Olympics.
|
Josephine Baker
|
2015
|
Missouri 1906–1975. World War Two spy, dancer, singer, civil rights activist. First African American woman to be inducted into French Pantheon.
|
Leonard Bernstein
|
2015
|
Massachusetts 1918–1990. Composer, conductor, author, music lecturer, and pianist known for West Side Story.
|
Rudolf Nureyev
|
2015
|
Siberia 1938–1993. Choreographer of the Paris Opera Ballet known for Swan Lake.
|
Billy Strayhorn
|
2015
|
Ohio 1915–1967. Jazz composer, pianist, lyricist, and arranger, best remembered for "Take the 'A' Train".
|
The Pink Triangle
|
2015
|
This is one of the four Historic or Social Milestones on the Legacy Walk
|
Sylvia Rivera
|
2016
|
NYC 1951–2002. Founding member of Gay Liberation Front, Gay Activists Alliance and STAR.
|
Vito Russo
|
2016
|
NYC 1946–1990. Film historian. Author of The Celluloid Closet: Homosexuality in the Movies.
|