Stormé DeLarverié, photographed in Minneapolis, Minnesota
The singer, drag performer, bouncer, and LGBTQ+ activist Stormé DeLarverié (1920–2014) was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, to an African American mother and a white father. From the mid-1950s through the 1960s, DeLarverié was the master of ceremonies of the Jewel Box Revue, America’s first racially inclusive, traveling drag revue. She is also credited as having thrown the first punch against the police as they raided the Stonewall Inn in 1969, a gay club in New York’s Greenwich Village, which sparked the Stonewall Uprising that transformed LGBTQ+ politics. For decades, DeLarverié was a self-appointed guardian of the LGBTQ+ community and an active member of the Stonewall Veterans’ Association. Her papers are held by the Library’s Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.
: Photographs and Prints Division, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture
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Items in Fortitude
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Flyer for Marian Anderson at Carnegie Hall
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Photograph of Stormé DeLarverié
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Portrait of Stormé DeLarverie by Robert Giard
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Poster for first Christopher Street Liberation Day
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Lithograph of the Boston Massacre
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William L. Patterson addressing the Bill of Rights Conference
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