22-04-2025
National Park Service scrubs Boston LGBTQ+ history in quiet purge of website
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'As much as I think people shouldn't find credence to their existence from the state, I do think the state admitting that you exist is a good thing,' said Michael Bronski, a professor at Harvard University and author of
'
In an email, the NPS would not confirm it made the website changes, saying only that it had implemented the Trump administration's orders.
The Globe's review of the agency's Boston web pages found at least six instances where the NPS removed articles on LGBTQ+ activism at Faneuil Hall, wiped guides on Black and LGBTQ+ history from the Longfellow House-Washington's Headquarters web page, and shortened all mentions and tags of 'LGBTQ+' to 'LGB.'
The tweaks, which occurred in February as noted on the website's timestamps, are part of broader changes the NPS has made to the historical record in recent months. As NPS removed transgender and queer histories from its Boston sites, the federal agency erased any mentions of transgender people from its
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Many historians responded to the changes with growing concern, especially as
'The one way we can fight back is by making sure folks know where the accurate information is, but if they are taking all that away, there's no way to fight it,' said
A screenshot of the National Park Service website showing LGBTQ+ Audio Tour that was previously accessible (at left) how it appears currently without the audio tour (at right.)
Wayback Machine
Activists worry the erasures leave a large gap of knowledge historians labored to uncover. The '
The
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'As America's storytellers, the National Park Service is committed to telling the history of all Americans in all of its diversity and complexity,' read a block quote on the historic site's now-missing LGBTQ+ history page. 'For many years, the rich histories of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer Americans have been erased through punishing laws and general prejudice—appearing sporadically in police proceedings, medical reports, military hearings, and immigration records.'
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The NPS has altered some local pages on Black history, too. A previous version of the Longfellow House-Washington's headquarters website detailed experiences of free and enslaved people throughout the site's existence. (Some info on that page has been spread across other parts of the site.)
A screenshot at left showing a National Park Service article on Gay and Lesbian Town Meetings that once existed and the 'Page not found' message that displays currently when trying to access the article.
Wayback Machine
An article on the
For Linger, the work felt significant.
'The National Park Service has always had this reputability,' Linger said. 'To have queer history included in that sort of prestige was a very big deal.'
But in February, as the NPS responded to President Trump's executive order, Linger received a call. The Boston NPS employee on the line gave them a choice: eliminate any mentions of trans and queer people from the article, or remove it.
Linger chose the latter.
'I didn't want to jettison my community, or any community,' Linger said.
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Local organizations are trying to fill the gaps the Boston NPS has left behind.
'Work created by government workers belongs to the American public,' said Joan Ilacqua, executive director of The History Project. 'We're going to make it available to the community because it should be.'
Ilacqua said the federal government's move to strip public history of transgender and queer perspectives shows that creating space for independent repositories is ever more crucial. Trump's executive orders, Ilacqua said, add uncertainty to a community that has always preserved history with limited resources and hands on deck.
'We're already coming from this scarcity mindset,' Ilacqua said. 'That urgency has always been there.'
Sebastian Belfanti, executive director of
The Trump administration canceled a $25,000 grant for a project focusing on
'It just takes a lot to know if you can even find anything,' Belfanti said.
Tiana Woodard can be reached at