News for Queer Women

Trans+ History Week Declared For The First Time By San Antonio’s City Council

WASHINGTON, DC – JANUARY 13: Protesters supporting transgender athletes competing in women’s sports wave a transgender pride flag outside the Supreme Court on January 13, 2026 in Washington, DC. Groups from both sides of the debate gathered on Tuesday morning to protest while two cases that prohibit transgender girls from joining girls’ and women’s sports teams are heard inside the Supreme Court. (Photo by Heather Diehl/Getty Images)

San Antonio’s first ever Trans+ History Week proclamation centers visibility, preservation, and the urgency of telling trans stories.

Featured Image: Photo by Heather Diehl/Getty Images

In a move that feels both overdue and genuinely meaningful, San Antonio’s City Council has issued its first ever proclamation recognizing Trans+ History Week—marking a notable moment of public support for the city’s transgender community.

The proclamation, introduced by Councilman Jalen McKee-Rodriguez—the first openly gay Black man elected to the council—designates May 4 through May 10 as a week dedicated to honoring trans, non-binary, gender-diverse, and intersex histories and people.

More than just a symbolic gesture, the language of the proclamation makes its intent clear: to push back against misinformation and the long-standing erasure of trans lives. It emphasizes preserving the stories, knowledge, and cultural contributions of trans people—not just as history, but as a living, usable archive for liberation now.

The timing is intentional. The week includes Trans+ History Day on May 6, which commemorates, the 1933 Nazi raid on the world’s first transgender clinic in Berlin—an act of destruction that attempted to erase a thriving archive of trans life and research.

Advocates in San Antonio are treating the moment as both recognition and a call to keep going. Local organizer Rain Garcia of Unfiltered Wings put it plainly: “San Antonio has no home for hate.”

Trans+ History Week itself is part of a broader, global initiative, Trans+ History Week CIC, led by trans communities to center education, reflection and visibility. With this proclamation, San Antonio joins that effort, publicly, and for the first time, making space for stories that have too often been pushed to the margins.

It’s a small line in city policy, but one that signals something bigger: that trans history is history, period.