LGBTQ Black History: Black Transgender Activist Elle Moxley

February 25, 2021
Elle Moxley speaks into a microphone.Elle Moxley (Photo: YouTube)Elle Moxley speaks into a microphone.

Update 2/13/25: Moxley changed her last name in 2022, after transitioning. You can read her essay on the decision here. This article has been updated to reflect her current name.

Elle Moxley has been an activist ever since she was growing up in Columbus, OH. She credits her inspiration from Marcus Garvey, Malcolm X, and Marsha P. Johnson, though she is inspiring all on her own.

Moxley is currently the executive director of the Marsha P. Johnson Institute, which she founded in 2015 and has quickly become a leading organization fighting for an end to violence against Black transgender people through civil disobedience, direct action, and community organizing.

She was also a co-founding member of the Black Lives Matter Global Network. She also led a GetEQUAL campaign for Tamir Rice, a Black child who was shot and killed by Cleveland police. She advocated for a revised case for Rice and called for the immediate firing of the officers involved.

During the 2020 summer protests for Black Lives Matter, Moxley was vocal about protecting those who intersect with Black and transgender identities, especially after Tony McDade, who was Black and transgender, was killed by police in Tallahassee, FL. In interviews, she called for abolishing the police as the way to abolish anti-Blackness and transphobia.

Under Moxley’s leadership in 2020, the Marsha P. Johnson Institute was able to give over 400 Black transgender people in America stipends, totaling over $250,000, for COVID-19 relief.

Moxley has a love for cosmetics and beauty, but she said she struggled to conform to Midwestern beauty standards and protested how her jobs would force her to appeal to customers in a style that wasn’t her own. Moxley still talks about how Black women have power in their beauty alone: “Our beauty is unmatched. Periodt. I remember being a young girl and recognizing the curve in my lip and the curl in my hair and being so fascinated that no one looked like me. It is completely fair to say that we are unapologetic.”

Moxley’s fierce will and political power is active and unshakeable, making her an assured Black History Month figure in the present and future.

 

 

Author(s)

Kelly McDonnell

Kelly McDonnell is an American University senior studying journalism and film and a Day Eight fellow. She is the Life section editor for American University’s The Eagle. Kelly enjoys writing about and watching movies and musicals.

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