Davina Anne Gabriel (1954âÂÂ2016) was an American lesbian transgender activist active between the 1980s and 2000s in Kansas City.
According to Gabriel, she became involved in feminist movements beginning in the 1970s, and with lesbian, gay, and transgender (then transsexual) movements in the late 1980s.
Gabriel was a scholar and writer, and she published her own local transgender newspaper called The Fine Print.
In the 1990s she participated in debates about Camp Trans, a protest of the womyn-born womyn policy of the Michigan Womyn's Music Festival.' She took part in the 1993 March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay, and Bi Equal Rights and Liberation as part of the "transgender contingent," which numbered "about forty persons".
In May 1995, Gabriel and other Transexual Menace members took part in a vigil in Richardson County, Nebraska to honor Brandon Teena, a murdered transgender man, on the first day of his murderer's trial. Around this time, Gabriel also worked with FTM International.
She created, edited, and contributed to TransSisters: The Journal of Transsexual Feminism, an early and influential transfeminist zine, published between 1993âÂÂ1995.' In the September/October 1993 issue, Gabriel said of founding the publication:
Her work in TranSisters including interviewing Sandy Stone and Leslie Feinberg.
Gabriel underwent gender-affirming surgery in the late 1970s. Gabriel wrote in 1993 that "my feminist identitifcation was among the major factors in my decision to undergo transsexual surgery".