Obama names Stonewall national monument; 1st for gay rights
June 25, 2016  02:40
President Barack Obama created the first national monument to gay rights on Friday, designating the site of the Stonewall riots in Manhattan where the modern gay rights movement took root nearly five decades ago.
The Stonewall National Monument will be anchored by Christopher Park, a small park just across from the iconic Stonewall Inn tavern, and covers a 7.7 acre swath of Greenwhich Village where the uprising took place after police raided the gay bar in 1969.
Obama said the monument would "tell the story of our struggle for LGBT rights" and of a civil rights movement that became a part of America.
"I believe our national parks should reflect the full story of our country: the richness and diversity and uniquely American spirit that has always defined us," Obama said in a video announcing the monument. "That we are stronger together, that out of many, we are one."
To herald the new monument, the video of Obama along with footage from the uprising was to be played at noon tomorrow on the billboards in Times Square just as New York's annual pride celebration is getting under way, the White House said. 
The declaration also comes as advocates celebrate the one-year anniversary on Sunday of the Supreme Court decision legalizing gay marriage nationwide.
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