Spotlight On: Pride in Queens

June is Pride Month! 🌈We are spotlighting LGBTQ+ activists and organizers honored in the borough of Queens with place names. 🏳️‍🌈

1
Stanley, Kathleen & Robert Rygor Way

Stanley, Kathleen & Robert Rygor Way, is co-named in honor of a local Astoria family who were activists for LGBTQ rights.

Stanley Rygor (1926 - 2019) Kathleen Rygor (1929 - 2021) and Robert Rygor (1953 - 1994) were all deeply involved in the LGBT community. Robert was a well-known LGBT community activist, prominent AIDS activist, and ACT UP spokesperson. In 1978, he became the first openly gay man to run for New York State Legislature. He was a member of Villagers Against Crime, advocating for safer neighborhoods, and in 1992, he testified at the Democratic Platform Committee Hearings to advocate for the inclusion of AIDS awareness and funding into their platform.

Stanley, Robert’s father, served in the United States Navy and along with his wife Kathleen became a civil rights activist during the 1960’s, including hosting meetings for the Queens NAACP. The Queens LGBT community referred to the Rygors as outspoken allies and advocates for AIDS Outreach after their son contracted the virus and passed away. Stanley was a member of the Irish LGBT group Lavender and Green Alliance, which honored him and his wife Kathleen, in 1996. Stanley and Kathleen Rygor have been featured in several films regarding their son on the challenges of homophobia and AIDS.

Sources:

Michael Dorgan, “Astoria Street Co-Named in Honor of Prominent Local Family Who Fought for LGBT Rights,” Sunnyside Pose, May 2, 2022, https://sunnysidepost.com/astoria-street-co-named-after-local-lgbt-and-aids-activist-family

2
P.S. 118 Lorraine Hansberry

Lorraine Hansberry (1930 – 1965) was a playwright, writer, and activist. Her play, “A Raisin in the Sun” (1959), was the first drama by an African American woman produced on Broadway.

Hansberry was born in Chicago in 1930, the youngest of four children to a real estate entrepreneur and a schoolteacher. Her parents were members of the NAACP and the Urban League. She was the niece of Pan-Africanist scholar and college professor Leo Hansberry. In 1938 her family moved to a white neighborhood where they were attacked by neighbors. The Hansberry’s refused to move until a court ordered them to do so, and the case made it to the Supreme Court as Hansberry v. Lee, ruling restrictive covenants illegal. The case was the inspiration for her Broadway play, A Raisin in the Sun, which also became a movie starring Sidney Poitier.

Hansberry attended the University of Wisconsin but left after two years and moved to New York to work as a writer and editor of Paul Robeson’s newspaper Freedom. She was a Communist and committed civil rights activist. She met her husband and closest friend, Robert Nemiroff, at a civil rights demonstration.

Despite her marriage to a man, Hansberry identified as a lesbian, but she was not “out,” though it seems like she was on the path to a more open life before her death, having built a circle of gay and lesbian friends. In 1964, Hansberry and Nemiroff divorced but continued to work together, and he was the executor of her estate when she died of cancer in 1965. Nemiroff donated all of Hansberry's personal and professional effects to the New York Public Library but blocked access to all materials related to Hansberry's lesbianism for 50 years. Nemiroff passed away in 1991, and in 2013, Nemiroff's daughter released the restricted materials for research.

Sources:

“Lorraine Hansberry,” National Women’s History Museum, accessed May 23, 2023, https://www.womenshistory.org/education-resources/biographies/lorraine-hansberry

“Lorraine Hansberry,” Biography, accessed May, 23, 2023, https://www.biography.com/authors-writers/lorraine-hansberry

“Lorraine Hansberry Public School 118,” NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project, accessed May 23, 2023, https://www.nyclgbtsites.org/site/lorraine-hansberry-public-school-118/

Wikidata contributors, "Q461758”, Wikidata, accessed December 7, 2023, https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q461758

“766734256,” OpenStreetMap, accessed December 7, 2023, https://www.openstreetmap.org/way/766734256

3
Tarlach Mac Niallais Way

Tarlach Mac Niallais (1963 - 2020) was an LGBTQ+ activist and disability rights advocate for over three decades. Born in Belfast, Ireland, he began campaigning on LGBTQ+ and Republican prisoners’ rights issues in the 1980s, and protested Ian Paisley’s anti-gay Free Presbyterian Church and the Democratic Unionist Party. He moved to NYC in the mid-1980s and became involved with the Irish Lesbian and Gay Organization “Lavender and Green”, where he became a formation manager, and was active in the protracted struggle by LGBTQ groups to be fully included in the St. Patrick’s Day Parade up Fifth Avenue in the 1990s until 2016, when the Lavender and Green Alliance and other Irish LGBTQ groups could finally march in the St. Patrick’s Day Parade. He died of complications from the COVID-19 virus on April 1, 2020.

Sources:

Dan Barry, “Tarlach MacNiallais, Who Fought for Gay and Disability Rights, Dies at 57,” New York Times, April 17, 2020, https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/17/obituaries/tarlach-macniallais-dead-coronavirus.html

Shane O’Brien, “New York street dedicated to Irish Covid victim, LGBT campaigner Tarlach Mac Niallais,” Irish Central, December 7, 2021, https://www.irishcentral.com/news/community/new-york-street-dedicated-tarlach-mac-niallais

Wikidata contributors, "Q91443012”, Wikidata, accessed December 14, 2023, https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q91443012

4
USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center

Billie Jean King, (b. 1943) Regarded by many as one of the greatest tennis players of all time and a Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient for her advocacy for women in sports and LGBTQ+ rights, Billie Jean King won 39 Grand Slam titles in her tennis career and led the fight for equal pay in tennis. Known for beating Bobby Riggs in 1973’s “Battle of the Sexes,” at age 29. She pushed relentlessly for the rights of women players and helped establish the Women’s Tennis Association, and the Women's Sports Foundation.

Billie Jean King was born Billie Jean Moffitt on November 22, 1943 in Long Beach, California. Her father, Bill, was a fire fighter and her mother, Betty, was a homemaker. An athlete from a young age, King played basketball and softball as a child. In her career she won 39 major titles, competing in both singles and doubles. King was a member of the victorious United States team in seven Federation Cups and nine Wightman Cups. For three years, she was the U.S. captain in the Federation Cup.

King and her husband, Larry King (married 1965–87), were part of a group that founded World Team Tennis (WTT) in 1974. She came out as a lesbian in 1981, and after her divorce from Larry King, she publicly embraced her homosexuality and became an advocate for gay rights.

King retired from competitive tennis in 1984 and the same year became the first woman commissioner in professional sports in her position with the World Team Tennis League. She was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 1987. The Fed Cup Award of Excellence was bestowed on her in 2010. In 1972, she was the joint winner, with John Wooden, of the Sports Illustrated Sportsman of the Year award and was one of the Time Persons of the Year in 1975. She has also received the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Sunday Times Sportswoman of the Year lifetime achievement award. She was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame in 1990.** In 2006, the USTA National Tennis Center in New York City was renamed the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center.** In 2018, she won the BBC Sports Personality of the Year Lifetime Achievement Award. In 2020, the Federation Cup was renamed the Billie Jean King Cup in her honor. In 2022, she was awarded the French Legion of Honor.

Sources:

Brandman, Mariana, “Billie Jean King,” National Women’s History Museum, accessed March 23, 2023, https://www.womenshistory.org/education-resources/biographies/billie-jean-king

Britannica, T. Editors of Encyclopaedia, "Billie Jean King," Encyclopedia Britannica, November 18, 2022, https://www.britannica.com/biography/Billie-Jean-King

Sandomir, Richard, “Tennis Center to Be Named for Billie Jean King,” New York Times, August 3, 2006, https://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/03/sports/tennis/03tennis.html

“Billie Jean King's name to be added to New York's National Tennis Center,” Advocate, August 4, 2006, https://www.advocate.com/news/2006/08/04/billie-jean-kings-name-be-added-new-yorks-national-tennis-center

Wikidata contributors, “Q1852081”, Wikidata, accessed December 7, 2023, https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q1852081

Wikidata contributors, “Q54527”, Wikidata, accessed December 7, 2023, https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q54527

“663795041,” OpenStreetMap, accessed December 14, 2023, https://www.openstreetmap.org/way/663795041

5
Adelaide Connaughton Way

Adelaide Connaughton (1958-2018) was an intern for then Assistant Queens District Attorney, Geraldine Ferraro when she was just 15. She went on to work for several elected officials, including the first lesbian Latina member of the New York City Council, Margarita Lopez. Prior to joining the staff of Council Member Lopez, she was a Lieutenant in the Fire Department's Emergency Medical Service and retired after 20 years of service. She was a Senior Entitlement Specialist for the Fortune Society, a non-profit providing formerly incarcerated individuals with the supportive services needed to thrive as contributing members of society. She also worked at the non-profit Safe Space, helping homeless LGBT youth to obtain supportive care. She fought for progressive causes important to the LGBT community and all New Yorkers and served on the Board of Governors of the Stonewall Democratic Club of NYC and the Executive Board of AIDS Center of Queens County (ACQC). She was also a founding Vice-President of the Jim Owles Liberal Democratic Club.

From 2012 to 2018, Adelaide and her West Highland Terrier, Elvis, participated in a therapy dog program at two hospitals in the North Bronx. Elvis and Adelaide were the first dog/human team to receive an Auxiliary Award from NYC Health and Hospitals.

Sources:

Gil Tauber, "NYC Honorary Street Names," accessed June 15, 2022, http://www.nycstreets.info/

"Obituary for Adelaide Connaughton," Leo Kearns, Inc. Funeral Homes, accessed September 23, 2022, https://kearnsfamily.com/book-of-memories/3503339/connaughton-adelaide/obituary.php

6
Edgar Garzon Corner

Edgar Garzon (1966 – 2001), better known as "Eddie," was a young openly gay man and member of the Jackson Heights based organization Colombian Lesbian and Gay Association (COLEGA). Garzon was a creative talent who worked as a set designer and was known for his designs of floats for pride parades. Garzon was walking home from Friends Tavern, a local gay bar, in August 2001 when he was beaten in a hate attack. He died Sept. 4, 2001, after nearly a month in a coma.

Sources:

Gil Tauber, "NYC Honorary Street Names," accessed June 15, 2022, http://www.nycstreets.info/

7
Guillermo Vasquez Corner

Guillermo Vasquez (1953-1996) was a leading gay rights, AIDS, and Latino community activist in Queens who emigrated from Colombia in 1972. A member of Queens Gays and Lesbians United, Vasquez would go on to serve on the board of the Empire State Pride Agenda, a statewide organization that advocated for LGBT rights. In 1993, he helped organize the first Queens Pride Parade as a member of the Queens Lesbian and Gay Pride Committee and served as a translator for Spanish-speaking participants. Vasquez passed away due to AIDS-related complications in 1996.

The corner of 77th Street and Broadway was co-named “Guillermo Vasquez Corner” next to the site of the Love Boat, a former gay Latino bar where he educated the community about HIV/AIDS.

Sources:

Amanda Davis, "Guillermo Vasquez Corner," NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project, 2018, https://www.nyclgbtsites.org/site/guillermo-vasquez-corner/

Breanna Bishop, “Jackson Heights street corner renamed after LGBT activist,” Metro, July 25, 2013, https://www.metro.us/jackson-heights-street-corner-renamed-after-lgbt-activist/

8
Jeanne, Jules, Morty Manford PFLAG Way

Jeanne Manford (1920 - 2013) Born Jean Sobelson in Flushing Queens, she married Jules Manford, had three children (Charles, Morty and Suzanne) ; she earned her bachelor's degree from Queens College in her 30s and joined the faculty of PS 32 in Queens in 1964. After her son Morty, who was openly gay and an activist, was beaten in April 1972 for protesting news coverage of the gay rights movement, Jeanne wrote a letter to The New York Post criticizing the police for not protecting him. Jeanne also gave interviews to radio and television shows in several cities in the weeks that followed. Two months later, on June 25, she walked alongside her son in a gay liberation march, carrying a sign: “Parents of Gays: Unite in Support for Our Children.” These turned out to be the first steps in the founding of Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays – PFLAG, now a national organization. In 2013, President Barack Obama honored Manford posthumously with the 2012 Presidential Citizens Medal, the second highest civilian award given by the United States, for her work in co-founding PFLAG and ongoing years of LGBT advocacy.

Morty Manford (1950-1992) was an assistant New York State Attorney General and a prominent early LGBTQ+ activist and advocate for gay rights in the United States. Morty was born in Flushing, Queens, to Jeanne and Jules Manford. While a student in 1968, he helped found Gay People at Columbia University, one of the nation's first gay campus groups. In 1969, he was at the Stonewall Inn when a melee broke out between gay customers and raiding police officers. That year Mr. Manford helped found and became president of the Gay Activists Alliance (GAA) and played a key role in organizing the Christopher Street Liberation Day March, which marked the first anniversary of the Stonewall riots and later evolved into the annual NYC Pride Parade. While protesting coverage of gay rights at the 50th annual Inner Circle dinner and lampoon show in 1972, Morty was beaten by the president of the city's Uniformed Firefighters Association, prompting his mother to start the organization Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays – PFLAG. Morty graduated from Columbia in 1975 and from Cardozo Law School in 1981, and was a public defender for the Legal Aid Society until he began working for the Attorney General in 1986; he died of complications from AIDS in 1992. His tireless efforts paved the way for greater acceptance and rights for LGBTQ+ individuals, and his activism continues to inspire generations.

Dr. Jules M Manford (1919 – 1982) was born in New York and was a dentist and advocate who lived with his wife and three children in Flushing Queens. He helped his wife Jeanne Manford to start Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays – PFLAG, and was the proud father and supporter of his gay son the activist and lawyer Morty Manford.

Sources:

Gil Tauber, "NYC Honorary Street Names," accessed June 15, 2022, http://www.nycstreets.info/

"Street Co-Naming Of Jeanne, Jules, Morty Manford PFLAG Way," Queens Gazette, April 16, 2014, https://www.qgazette.com/articles/street-co-naming-of-jeanne-jules-morty-manford-pflag-way/

NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project, "Manford Family Residence," accessed May 8, 2023, https://www.nyclgbtsites.org/site/manford-family-residence/

PFLAG NYC, "Queens Street to be Named for PFLAG & Manford Family," April 14, 2014, https://www.pflagnyc.org/uncategorized/queens-street-to-be-named-for-pflag-manford-family/

Andy Humm, "JEANNE MANFORD," Jewish Women's Archives, accessed May 8, 2023, https://jwa.org/weremember/manford-jeanne

Wikidata contributors, "Q2912556”, Wikidata, accessed December 7, 2023, https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q2912556

9
Jeanne and Jules Manford Post Office Building

Jeanne and Jules Manford were the parents of LGBTQ+ activist and Lawyer Morty Manford, Jeanne was the founder of PFLAG.

Jeanne Manford (1920 - 2013) Born Jean Sobelson in Flushing Queens, she married Jules Manford, had three children (Charles, Morty and Suzanne) ; she earned her bachelor's degree from Queens College in her 30s and joined the faculty of PS 32 in Queens in 1964. After her son Morty, who was openly gay and an activist, was beaten in April 1972 for protesting news coverage of the gay rights movement, Jeanne wrote a letter to The New York Post criticizing the police for not protecting him. Jeanne also gave interviews to radio and television shows in several cities in the weeks that followed. Two months later, on June 25, she walked alongside her son in a gay liberation march, carrying a sign: “Parents of Gays: Unite in Support for Our Children.” These turned out to be the first steps in the founding of Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays – PFLAG, now a national organization. In 2013, President Barack Obama honored Manford posthumously with the 2012 Presidential Citizens Medal, the second highest civilian award given by the United States, for her work in co-founding PFLAG and ongoing years of LGBT advocacy.

Dr. Jules M Manford (1919 – 1982) was born in New York and was a dentist and advocate who lived with his wife and three children in Flushing Queens. He helped his wife Jeanne Manford to start Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays – PFLAG, and was the proud father and supporter of his son the LGTBQ+ activist and lawyer Morty Manford.

Sources:

“Jeanne and Jules Manford Post Office Building Dedication Ceremony,” United States Postal Service Press Release, May 17, 2017, https://about.usps.com/news/state-releases/ny/2017/ny_2017_ma0517.htm

“Queens post office named for PFLAG founders,” Dallas Voice, May 22, 2017, https://dallasvoice.com/queens-post-office-named-pflag-founders/

Dunlap, David W., “Jeanne Manford, 92, Who Stood Up for Her Gay Son, Inspiring Others, Dies,” New York Times, January 10, 2013, https://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/11/obituaries/jeanne-manford-founder-of-pflag-dies-at-92.html

Wikidata contributors, "Q2912556”, Wikidata, accessed December 7, 2023, https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q2912556

10
Julio Rivera Corner

Julio Rivera (1961 – 1990) was a Bronx born Puerto Rican, who lived in Jackson Heights and worked as a bartender. On July 2, 1990, Rivera was brutally murdered in the nearby schoolyard of PS 69, by three individuals who targeted him because he was gay. He was just 29 years old.

Julio's death mobilized LGBTQ+ activism in Jackson Heights and all of Queens, candlelight vigils and protests were held by the community. As a result of grassroots organizing and media attention, the city eventually re-classified his death as a hate crime and put a reward out for the arrest of the killers.

To commemorate Julio Rivera’s death and raise the visibility of the LGBTQ+ community in Jackson Heights, the Queens Lesbian and Gay Pride Committee established the Queens Pride Parade in 1993, with a route that includes what is now known as Julio Rivera Corner.

Julio Rivera’s death was a turning point for LGBTQ+ activism in Queens, and led to the formation of several important organizations, some of which include Queens Gays and Lesbians United (Q-GLU), the Lesbian and Gay Democratic Club of Queens, and Queens Pride House.

Sources:

Gonzalez, David, “At Site of Gay Man’s Murder, a Street Corner Acknowledges Its Past,” New York Times, March 20, 2016, https://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/21/nyregion/at-site-of-gay-mans-murder-a-queens-street-corner-acknowledges-its-past.html

Martinez, Arianna, “30 Years Later: Reflections on Julio Rivera’s Life and Death,” The Latinx Project, June 25, 2020,  https://www.latinxproject.nyu.edu/intervenxions/nbsp30-years-later-reflections-on-julio-riveras-life-and-death

“Julio Rivera,” Find A Grave, accessed May 23, 2023, https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/104093053/julio-rivera

11
Lorena Borjas Way

Born in Veracruz, Mexico, Lorena Borjas (1960-2020) was a fierce advocate for the transgender and Latinx communities in Queens. Borjas moved to the U.S. in 1980 and earned a green card through a Reagan-era amnesty program. She was convicted of charges related to prostitution in 1994, but the charges were later vacated, since she was forced into prostitution by human traffickers. However, other convictions remained on her record until 2017, when then-Governor Andrew M. Cuomo pardoned her. She became a U.S. citizen in 2019.

Borjas inspired many people through her advocacy for the LGBT community. She co-founded the Lorena Borjas Community Fund in 2012 and was actively involved in many organizations, including the AIDS Center of Queens County, the Hispanic AIDS Forum and the Latino Commission on AIDS. In 2015, she founded El Colectivo Intercultural TRANSgrediendo, a non-profit organization that works to defend the rights of transgender and gender non-binary people. The organization provides legal and medical services to trans and non-binary sex workers and undocumented members of the community. Although Borjas had already been taking sex workers to clinics to get tested for HIV and helping to get lawyers for possible deportation cases, El Colectivo was a way for her to officially continue that work. She also became a counselor for the Community Healthcare Network's Transgender Family Program, where she worked to obtain legal aid for victims of human trafficking. Borjas died on March 30, 2020, of complications from COVID-19.

On June 26, 2022, a bill was signed by Governor Kathy Hochul establishing the Lorena Borjas transgender and gender non-binary (TGNB) wellness and equity fund, which will be used to invest in increasing employment opportunities, providing access to gender-affirming healthcare, and raising awareness about transgender and gender non-binary people in New York.

Sources:

El Colectivo Intercultural TRANSgrediendo, https://www.ourvoicesarefree.org/

Daniel E. Slotnik, "Lorena Borjas, Transgender Immigrant Activist, Dies at 59," The New York Times, April 1, 2020, https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/01/obituaries/lorena-borjas-dead-coronavirus.html

Bill Parry, "Transgender activist Lorena Borjas honored with Elmhurst street co-naming," QNS, April 1, 2021, https://qns.com/2021/04/transgender-activist-lorena-borjas-honored-with-elmhurst-street-co-naming/

Chantal Vaca, "Through Community, Lorena Borjas’ Legacy Lives On," The Know (blog), December 27, 2021, https://wetheknow.wordpress.com/2021/12/27/lorena-borjass-legacy-lives-on-in-her-queens-community/?fbclid=IwAR3CQ6NKK1FZVwF6FH_fQRZuBMijF-WiRyaZ-EQAruBIUeWvwS9uznqRa8w

Queens Stories: The Story of Lorena Borjas: The Transgender Latina Activist, Queens Public Television, https://qptv.org/content/queens-stories-story-lorena-borjas-transgender-latina-activist

New York State Senate, Assembly Bill A9418A, https://www.nysenate.gov/legislation/bills/2021/A9418

12
Louis Rispoli Way

Louis Rispoli (1950 – 2012), a 30 year resident of Sunnyside, was a gay rights activist and arts & music supporter. He was attacked while walking near Queens Boulevard and 42nd Street, and died days later after being taken off life support.

Rispoli worked as an administrator at the Greenwich House Music School in Greenwich Village, and was an advocate in the earliest stages of the city's gay rights movement. He lived in his Queens neighborhood for decades, and friends affectionately dubbed him "Mama Lou," because he always took care of people.

Sources:

Gil Tauber, "NYC Honorary Street Names," accessed June 15, 2022, http://www.nycstreets.info/

"Woodside street co-named after beloved community member Lou Rispoli," QNS.com, July 30, 2013, https://qns.com/2013/07/woodside-street-co-named-after-beloved-community-member-lou-rispoli/

Josey Bartlett, "Lou Rispoli, Sunnyside attack victim, has died," Queens Chronicle, October 26, 2012, https://www.qchron.com/editions/western/lou-rispoli-sunnyside-attack-victim-has-died/article_887c78c0-1f78-11e2-b4e9-001a4bcf887a.html

13
Mary Audrey Gallagher Way

Mary Gallagher (1932 - 2018) was an early advocate for the LGBTQ community and an educator in Queens. She was a founding member of PFLAG/Queens, a support, education and advocacy group for parents, families and friends of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people, and served as its Queens Hospitality Chairperson. Gallagher was also a public school teacher for many years and later opened a nursery school and served as administrator of several daycare centers in New York City.

Sources:

O'Reilly, Anthony, “Mary Audrey Gallagher, Dromm's mother and LGBTQ advocate, dies at 85,” Queens Chronicle, January 8, 2018, https://www.qchron.com/editions/mary-audrey-gallagher-dromms-mother-and-lgbtq-advocate-dies-at-85/article_d95066b2-f489-11e7-8d53-4b68cc5d9bc1.html

“Mary Audrey Gallagher Way Unveiled,” Queens Gazette, August 29, 2018, https://www.qgazette.com/articles/mary-audrey-gallagher-way-unveiled/

14
Greg Stein Way

Greg Stein (1948-2021) was an LGBTQIA+ rights and AIDs advocate in Queens. He served as a treasurer for the Queens Lesbian and Gay Pride Committee for more than two decades and was treasurer of the AIDS Center of Queens County nearly from its inception. Stein served on the board and volunteered for the Lesbian and Gay Democratic Club of Queens. Stein taught math at teacher at Russell Sage Junior High School in Forest Hills, was a member of the Phi Kappa Theta fraternity, and served as a lectern at Queen of Angels Church in Sunnyside. In a 2018 Queens Memory Project oral history interview, Stein described how the experience of having friends with HIV inspired him to become an AIDS and LGBTQIA+ advocate.

Sources:

Naiesha Rose, "LGBTQ, AIDS Advocate To Be Honored With Forest Hills Street Sign," Patch.com, July 15, 2022, https://patch.com/new-york/foresthills/lgbtq-aids-advocate-be-honored-forest-hills-street-sign

Stein, Greg, by Stefani Priskos, January 6, 2018, https://queenslibrary.aviaryplatform.com/r/7p8tb0xv6r