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    • Deep Dive - Art of a Hit
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Deep Dive - Marsha P Johnson 

Picture
​Biography Marsha P. Johnson -1945-1992  By Emma Rothberg, Ph.D. | Associate Educator, Digital Learning and InnovationMarsha P. Johnson was one of the most prominent figures of the gay rights movement of the 1960s and 1970s in New York City. Always sporting a smile, Johnson was an important advocate for homeless LGBTQ+ youth, those effected by H.I.V. and AIDS, and gay and transgender rights.
Marsha P. Johnson was born on August 24, 1945, in Elizabeth, New Jersey. Assigned male at birth, Johnson grew up in an African American, working-class family. She was the fifth of seven children born to Malcolm Michaels Sr. and Alberta Claiborne. Johnson’s father worked on the General Motors Assembly Line in Linden, NJ and her mother was a housekeeper. Johnson grew up in a religious family and began attending Mount Teman African Methodist Episcopal Church as a child; she remained a practicing Christian for the rest of her life. Johnson enjoyed wearing clothes made for women and wore dresses starting at age five. Even though these clothes reflected her sense of self, she felt pressured to stop due to other children’s bullying and experiencing a sexual assault at the hands of a 13-year-old-boy. Immediately after graduating from Thomas A. Edison High School, Johnson moved to New York City with one bag of clothes and $15. 
Once in New York, Johnson returned to dressing in clothing made for women and adopted the full name Marsha P. Johnson; the “P” stood for “Pay It No Mind,” a phrase that became her motto. Johnson described herself as a gay person, a transvestite, and a drag queen and used she/her pronouns; the term “transgender” only became commonly used after her death. According to her nephew, Johnson always maintained a close but fraught relationship with her family back in New Jersey. 
It was not easy to live on the margins. New York State still persecuted gay people and frequently criminalized their activities and presence. Rights for LGBTQ+ people were limited and sometimes ignored completely. Having difficulty finding employment, Johnson turned to sex work. She was often abused by clients and arrested by the police. She also did not have a permanent home during this time, and bounced around sleeping at friends’ homes, hotels, restaurants, and movie theaters. She also found work waiting tables and performing in drag shows. In a 1992 interview, Johnson said "I was no one, nobody, from Nowheresville until I became a drag queen.”
Not long after moving to New York, then 17-year-old Johnson met 11-year-old Sylvia Rivera. Rivera, a Puerto Rican transgender woman, and the two became instant friends. Rivera later said of Johnson, “she was like a mother to me.” As Johnson had done for herself, she encouraged Rivera to love herself and her identity. Johnson adored wearing colorful, fun outfits that she made from finds at thrift stores and discarded items; she was also often seen wearing a crown of flowers.
Johnson’s life changed when she found herself engaging with the resistance at The Stonewall Inn on June 28, 1969. In the early morning hours, police raided the bar and began arresting the patrons, most of whom were gay men. Johnson and Rivera arrived at Stonewall around 2am where, Johnson said in a later interview, “the place was already on fire, and there was a raid already. The riots had already started.” There are many competing stories about what Johnson did during the raid on the Stonewall Inn, but it is clear she was on the front lines. Johnson, like many other transgender women, felt they had nothing to lose. They were not only angered by the police raid but also the oppression and fear they experienced every day. In the wake of the raid, Johnson and Rivera led a series of protests. The raid on Stonewall galvanized the gay rights movement. The first Gay Pride Parade took place in 1970 and a series of gay rights groups—including the Gay Liberation Front, a more radical organization, and the Gay Activist Alliance, a more moderate and focused spin-off group—emerged. Johnson was involved in the early days of both but grew frustrated by the exclusion of transgender and LGBTQ+ people of color from the movement. She actively spoke out about the transphobia in the early gay rights movement. In 1970, Johnson and Rivera founded Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries (STAR), “an organization dedicated to sheltering young transgender individuals who were shunned by their families.” The two also began STAR House, a place where transgender youth could stay and feel safe. STAR House was of personal importance to Johnson and Rivera as they had both spent much of their youth experiencing homelessness and destitution. The first STAR House was in the back of an abandoned truck in Greenwich Village. STAR House then moved to a dilapidated building, which they tried to fix up, but the group was evicted after eight months.
Throughout the 1970s, Johnson became a more visible and prominent member of the gay rights movement. She began performing with the drag group, “Hot Peaches.” She attracted the attention of many, including the pop artist Andy Warhol who included her in a series of prints in 1975 entitled “Ladies and Gentlemen.” In an interview Johnson did for a 1972 book, she said her ambition was “to see gay people liberated and free and to have equal rights that other people have in America.” She wanted to see her “gay brothers and sisters out of jail and on the streets again.” In another interview, she said “as long as gay people don’t have their rights all across America…there is no reason for celebration.” In 1980, she was invited to ride in the lead car of the Gay Pride Parade in New York City.
Despite her joyous personality and ever-present smile, Johnson experienced hardship. She never let her personal setbacks stop her advocacy. In the 1970s, Johnson experienced a series of mental health breakdowns and spent time in and out of psychiatric hospitals. She also continued to engage in sex work, not knowing any other way to make money, and continued to get arrested. In 1990, Johnson was diagnosed with H.I.V. She spoke publicly about her diagnosis and how people should not be afraid of those with the disease in a June 26, 1992 interview. 
On July 6, 1992, Johnson’s body was found in the Hudson River. She was 46. Initially ruled a suicide, many friends questioned that conclusion and suspected foul play. At the time, 1992 was the worst year on record for anti-LGBTQ violence according to the New York Anti-Violence Project. Police then reclassified the case as a drowning from undetermined cause, but the LGBTQ+ community was furious that the police refused to investigate further and that many press outlets did not cover her death. At her funeral, hundreds of people showed up at the church; it was so crowded that people stood on the street. In 2012, the New York Police Department reopened the case into Johnson’s death.
In 2019, New York City announced that Marsha P. Johnson, along with Rivera, would be the subject of a monument commissioned by the Public Arts Campaign “She Built NYC.” The monument will be the first in NYC to honor transgender women. In 2020, New York State named a waterfront park in Brooklyn for Johnson. Johnson is also now the subject of many documentaries. She remains one of the most recognized and admired LGBTQ+ advocates.

Videos and Playlists
The Death and Life of Marsha P Johnson Documentary Trailer 2017
​
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pADsuuPd79E
​
Vintage Annals Archive Deep Dive Marsha P Johnson Playlist 
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLh4zYKaPKme7rYfXi_gBqQbZLGkDN8tUC

Articles 
https://www.nps.gov/articles/000/marsha-p-johnson-sylvia-rivera.htm
https://www.outhistory.org/exhibits/show/tgi-bios/marsha-p-johnson%20
https://www.outhistory.org/exhibits/show/tgi-bios/marsha-p-johnson%20
https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/marsha-p-johnson-1945-1992/
https://www.ourstreetsnow.org/post/a-dive-into-history-marsha-p-johnson
https://www.essence.com/entertainment/5-things-know-activist-marsha-p-johnson/

  • Home
  • Vintage Annals Archive Podcast
  • About Vintage Annals Archive and Staff
  • Building Moo-mentum A very unofficial How to Dance in Ohio Podcast
  • Pelt A Minx Series Podcast and Deep Dive
  • The Jewish Vintage Annals Archive - Digital Online Archive and Podcast
  • Framing The World - A Podcast on Documentary Photographers by Vintage Annals Archive
  • How to Support VAA and VAAO Podcast
  • VAA Deep Dives
    • Deep Dive - Art of a Hit
    • Deep Dive - Pee Wee Herman
    • Deep Dive - Paul Williams
    • Deep Dive - Old School Kind and Bad-Ass Jewish Managers and Producers of the 70's 80's, and 90's
    • Deep Dive - Diversity on Broadway and Musical Movies - LGBTQIA+, Feminist, Cult, Black Broadway Musicals and Movie Musicals 1960's to 2020
    • Deep Dive - Florynce Kennedy
    • Deep Dive - Buffy Sainte-Marie
    • Deep Dive - Private Press Records
    • Deep Dive - The Unarius Academy of Science
    • Deep Dive - Daniel Johnston
    • Deep Dive - Grace Jones
    • Deep Dive - Gimme Gimme Octopus Kure Kure Takora
    • Deep Dive - Weeki Wachee Mermaids
    • Deep Dive - Marsha P Johnson
    • Deep Dive - Hunter S. Thompson
    • Deep Dive - Klaus Nomi
    • Deep Dive - Adult (aka Nudie) Musicals 1970's
    • Deep Dive - Gordon Parks
    • Deep Dive - Lee Hazlewood
    • Deep Dive - Harvey Milk
    • Deep Dive - Leonard Peltier
    • Deep Dive - Melvin Van Peebles
    • Deep Dive - Angela Davis
    • Deep Dive - The Cockettes and Fayette Hauser
    • Deep Dive - Jandek
    • Deep Dive - Paris is Burning
    • Deep Dive - Elton and Betty White
    • Deep Dive - Werner Herzog
    • Deep Dive - Outsider Musicians
    • Deep Dive - Crispin Glover's "It" Trilogy
    • Deep Dive - The Levitation of The Pentagon
    • Deep Dive - Raunchy 70's Funk and Soul w/ Millie Jackson and Blowfly
    • Deep Dive - The Kuchar Brothers
    • Deep Dive - 1970's and 1980's Afro-Punk Bands
    • Deep Dive - Frank Furko and Pudgie Wudgie
    • Deep Dive - Doris Wishman
    • Deep Dive - Gary Floyd and The Dicks
    • Deep Dive - Jobriath
    • Deep Dive - Harold and Maude (Behind the Scenes)
    • Deep Dive - Judee Sill
    • Deep Dive - Claude Cahun
    • Deep Dive - Cindy Sherman
    • Deep Dive - Diane Arbus
    • Deep Dive - SCTV
    • Deep Dive Shel Silverstein's Adult Material
    • Deep Dive - Yayoi Kusama
    • Deep Dive - Man Ray
    • Deep Dive - Ruth Gordon
    • Deep Dive - Ralph Eugene Meatyard
    • Deep Dive - Bud Cort
    • Deep Dive - The Shaggs
    • Deep Dive - Phantom of The Paradise
    • Deep Dive - Schmigadoon! Season 1 and 2
    • Deep Dive - Minx
  • Vintage Annals Archive Feed (Linktree)
  • VAA Featured Videos/Films Archive
  • About All Family and Found Photo Archive Collections
    • African American Fashion Show 1971
    • All Time Favorites Found Collection 1940-1990
    • African American Found Photos 1970's
    • African American Family 1970's
    • African American Family 80's-90's
    • African American Family Vacation 1970's
    • African American Family 1960's
    • Japanese Family 1940's-1960's
    • 1970's Jewish Wedding
    • Jewish Family 1940's - 1980's
    • Jewish family 1940's -1970's
    • 1960's Jewish Family Collection
    • Vandalized Jewish Cemetery in Philadelphia
    • Jazz and Blues Performers in Philadelphia 1980's
    • Collection of Wedding Portraits from 1960's- 1970's from A Photo Studio
    • Mel Curtis (Schwartz) Adult Film Biz circa 1980’s
    • Roxborough Neighborhood in Philadelphia
    • Found 1960's 35mm Slides
    • Found Professional 1960’s and 1970’s photographs
    • Peggy McSperrin's Family Collection 1950's - 1970's
    • 1980's fashion 35mm slides
    • Insane Collection of 70's Cosplay Photographs
    • Dokken and 80's Slides
    • Black and White 1940's 35mm slides
    • Vintage Publicity Stills From The Sound of Philadelphia Legend Group
    • Shalom Memorial
    • Pet Cemetery Philadelphia
    • 3D FAMILY FOUND PHOTOGRAPHS
    • Found Photo Collection from the 1930's and 1940's
  • Events and Classes VAA
  • YouTube Page
  • Arlene Gottfried Legacy Project
  • Donation And Support Page
  • The Rated-R School
  • Contact