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Marsha P. Johnson Necklace

Marsha P. Johnson Necklace

$58.00Price
  • Vintage Kordes & Lichtenfels Charm
  • Citrine
  • Hessenite Garnet
  • Whiskey Quartz
  • Tourmaline
  • 14k Gold Filled Chain, Clasp, & Findings

 

 

Length ⇢ 16 inches + 3 inch Extender

 

 

Find out the history, lore, & healing powers of each gemstone used in the information sections at the bottom of the page.  

We offer a brief version of this information in an elegant card format. You can find these cards in the Crystal Card blog post, where you can download & print it for yourself or add it to a gift! Click on the specific gemstone card & you will see a download icon. You can print the card out yourself, or let us know you are gifting these earrings through the "Add A Note" section at purchase. 

For more instructions on how to "Add A Note," visit our FAQ's page. 

 

 

Every necklace is made with natural stones of the same shape & size, however, the color of the gemstone may vary slightly.  

  • LGBTQ activists and drag queens prominent in New York City’s Greenwich Village in the 1960s, Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rae Rivera were instrumental members in the burgeoning gay-rights movement.  

    Johnson is said to have resisted arrest and thrown the first bottle (or brick or stone) at police during the 1969 Stonewall Riots, which sparked the national LGBTQ movement. Rivera, a civil rights activist, feminist and pacifist founded the Gay Liberation Front and the Gay Activists Alliance, and was also a participant int the Stonewall Riots. 

    Together, in the early 1970s, Johnson and Rivera co-founded the Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries (STAR), working with runaway or homeless transgender and drag queen women of color. Tragically, Johnson’s body was found in the Hudson River on July 6, 1992, shortly after the 1992 Pride March. Her death was originally ruled a suicide, but friends reported seeing her being harassed earlier that day, leading to suspicion surrounding her death. Rivera died in 2002. 

     

    This mini bio was sourced from the article '11 Bold Women Who Changed the World', written by Brynn Holland 

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