The dominant safety concern at Stonewall National Monument isn't a weather hazard — it's the surrounding urban environment. New York County recorded a violent crime rate of 400.6 per 100,000 residents in 2023, which is the primary risk factor families should weigh when visiting this Greenwich Village site. As a small urban monument rather than a wilderness destination, your safety calculus here looks very different from a traditional campground.
Because this is a city-based monument with no overnight camping, practical preparation centers on street-level awareness. Keep bags zipped and worn across the body rather than over one shoulder, avoid displaying expensive cameras or phones openly on crowded sidewalks, and plan your visit during daylight hours when foot traffic is heaviest around Christopher Street. If you're parking a vehicle or RV nearby, use a secured garage rather than street parking and leave nothing visible inside.
Top recorded hazards in New York County
County dataFrom NOAA Storm Events (2024). Counts of recorded incidents — not all occurred at this park.
- Lightning 1
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About Stonewall National Monument
Before the 1960s, almost everything about living authentically as a lesbian, a bisexual person or a gay man was illegal. The Stonewall Uprising on June 28, 1969 is a milestone in the quest for civil rights and provided momentum for a movement.
Weather
New York City experiences all four seasons. It is typically hot in the summer and cold in the winter with cool springs and autumns.