FILE - An NYPD officer grabs a youth by the hair as another officer clubs a young man during a confrontation in Greenwich Village after a Gay Power march, Aug. 31, 1970, in New York. A year earlier, the June 1969 uprising by young gays, lesbians and transgender people in New York City, clashing with police near a bar called the Stonewall Inn, was a vital catalyst in expanding LGBTQ+ activism nationwide and abroad. (AP Photo/File)
Festive lights and flags adorn the bar inside the Stonewall Inn, Monday, June 17, 2024, in New York. The space next door to the bar will open as the new visitor center for the Stonewall National Monument on the anniversary of the 1969 rebellion that helped reshape LGBTQ+ life in the United States. (AP Photo/Pamela Smith)
During an interview inside the Stonewall National Monument Visitor Center, Friday, June 21, 2024, in New York, social activist Mark Segal poses for a photograph while holding a picture that shows his arrest during the 1969 Stonewall Inn riot. The Stonewall National Monument's visitor center opens on Friday, June 28, the anniversary of the 1969 rebellion that helped reshape LGBTQ+ life in the United States in the ensuing decades. (AP Photo/ Andres Kudacki)
A National Park Service sign marks the Stonewall National Monument outside the Stonewall Inn, Monday, June 17, 2024, in New York. The building will open as the new visitor center for the Stonewall National Monument on Friday, June 28, the anniversary of the 1969 rebellion that helped reshape LGBTQ+ life in the United States. (AP Photo/Pamela Smith)
Stonewall Inn co-owners Kurt Kelly, left, and Stacy Lentz pose for a portrait inside the Stonewall Inn, Monday, June 17, 2024, in New York. The space next door to the bar will open as the new visitor center for the Stonewall National Monument on Friday, June 28, the anniversary of the 1969 rebellion that helped reshape LGBTQ+ life in the United States.The pair see the visitor center as a fitting neighbor and hope it will draw more people to the site and the bar. (AP Photo/Pamela Smith)
People sit outside the Stonewall Inn, Monday, June 17, 2024, in New York. The community is reclaiming the building and its place in history as it opens it as the Stonewall National Monument's visitor center on Friday, June 28, the anniversary of the 1969 rebellion that helped reshape LGBTQ+ life in the United States in the ensuing decade. (AP Photo/Pamela Smith)
Pride flags flutter in the wind at the Stonewall National Monument, Monday, June 17, 2024, in New York. (AP Photo/Pamela Smith)
Decorations hang from the ceiling inside the Stonewall Inn, Monday, June 17, 2024 in New York. In 1969 Stonewall had the biggest bar and one of the two dance floors that drew its young, diverse crowd. But after a raid sparked an uprising and the Stonewall shut down, 51 Christopher St. became a bagel shop, a gay bar briefly again, a clothing store, a nail salon, then a vacant space. Its big “STONEWALL INN” sign came down in 1989, a few years before a new version of the tavern opened. (AP Photo/Pamela Smith)
This rendering shows the proposed interior of the Stonewall National Monument Visitors Center in New York. The visitor center aims to tell the Stonewall story in more depth than the monument itself, which centers on a tiny park that features historical photographs but limited interpretive information. Overseen by the National Park Service and the LGBTQ+ advocacy group Pride Live, the $3.2 million visitor center was financed chiefly with private donations. (Courtesy of EDG Architecture and Engineering)
Social activist Mark Segal poses for a photograph inside the Stonewall National Monument Visitor Center, Friday, June 21, 2024, in New York. Segal, who was arrested during the 1969 Stonewall riot, was 18 years old and had just moved to New York's Greenwich Village neighborhood in 1969 from Philadelphia, where he found the LGBTQ+ community for which he'd longed. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)