Pioneering model who paved the way for thousands in Liverpool

April Ashley pictured at her home in Hay-on-Wye. -Credit:Mirrorpix
April Ashley pictured at her home in Hay-on-Wye. -Credit:Mirrorpix


A pioneering model paved the way for not only thousands in Liverpool but the LGBTQ+ community around the world.

Many will be familiar already with the extraordinary life of April Ashley - one of the first people in the world to undergo gender reassignment surgery. But, with the first Trans+ History Week happening this week, the ECHO has looked back at how the Liverpool-born activist became an icon for many.

Set up by Queer AF, the initiative is a “reflective period to learn and celebrate the momentous and millennia-old history of transgender, non-binary, gender-diverse and Intersex people”.

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The week-long campaign begins on Monday, May 6 - the 91st anniversary of the Nazi raid on the world’s first trans clinic, as Queer AF, said: “It's the week they tried to erase us. It's the week we will be remembered.”

The life of April Ashley

April was born in the Liverpool maternity hospital on Oxford Street in 1935. She spent her childhood on Pitt Street, L1 then Teynham Crescent L11, before joining the Merchant Navy and eventually living in London, Hay on Wye, Paris and California.

April was only the ninth patient of Dr Georges Burou, a pioneer of gender reassignment surgery. She started living as April during her time in Paris when she saved up £3,000 - the equivalent of over £86,000 in 2024 - for Burou's seven-hour surgery by working at a drag club called Le Carrousel.

Just as her career as an actor and Vogue model was blossoming back in Britain after surgery, the Sunday People outed April as transgender in 1961.

April Ashley at the Museum of Liverpool
April Ashley at the Museum of Liverpool -Credit:National Museums Liverpool

April previously told the ECHO about this "horrendous time". She said: "My career was destroyed, and apart from jobs where you were paid under the table, I never worked again.

“With others, when they found out, my shifts would be changed, my hours reduced, and then they would tell me they didn’t need me, but then advertise for someone else. It was heartbreaking because I would have been a movie star.

“Every time I met directors they said they were going to make me a star. They’d say, 'with that figure, that face, those legs and that body', then they turned their backs on me."

April Ashley pictured during an interview with Marjorie Proops
April Ashley pictured during an interview with Marjorie Proops -Credit:Mirrorpix

Even after moving to the USA and working as a waitress or hostess, April's past always loomed close behind. And every time it caught up, the work disappeared.

Nevertheless, April lived an incredible life which many of her close friends fondly remembered at a special commemoration service at St George’s Hall last year.

The service marked the start of a journey to bring an archive of April’s personal memorabilia, clothes, jewellery, letters and photographs back to her home city.

The unique collection consisted of thousands of artefacts such as diaries, address books, correspondence with Elizabeth Taylor and former partner Grayson Perry, and even fan letters including one from a man who offered to take April to Venus on his rocket ship.

Transgender rights campaigner April Ashley receiving an honorary degree from the University of Liverpool in 2016
Transgender rights campaigner April Ashley receiving an honorary degree from the University of Liverpool in 2016 -Credit:Liverpool Echo/James Maloney

There was also a series of legal documents relating to her marriage annulment and her fight for legal recognition as a woman.

Part of April’s archive had already been donated to Liverpool City Archives in 2014 following the year-long exhibition about her life at the Museum of Liverpool that attracted 900,000 visitors.

Whilst at the event, the ECHO spoke with some of April’s longest and closest friends and family, as they shared fond memories and paid tribute to the extraordinary life of the model, actress and restaurateur.

Her friends spoke about how she met many twentieth-century icons including Einstein and Picasso and performed for others such as Elvis, Salvador Dali and Bob Hope at the world-famous Le Carrousel club.

April Ashley poses with her Member of the British Empire medal
April Ashley poses with her Member of the British Empire medal -Credit:Sean Dempsey via Getty ImagesAFP

They also recalled how being photographed by David Bailey she was once regarded as Vogue’s top underwear model in the 1960s.

Glyn Albarn Roberts, from Wales, explained how he first met April in 1977 whilst he was studying History in London; the two struck up a friendship while both enjoying the boat races at Oxford.

Whilst sipping on champagne which had been recovered from April's house, Glyn told the ECHO: "April was a very proud woman, especially of what she had achieved and one of the things she was most proud of was being embraced by the same city that treated her badly as a kid. She died happily knowing her city accepted her as a woman in every sense of the world."

Vera Nielsen Taylor, from France, first came to know of April in 1975. She added: “Although April was an extravagant character, she was full of good old-fashioned advice and she told me once, when I confided a problem, that one should never bear grudges.

“During her life, she was often treated badly by the press and society as an individual. Her advice to me was to simply put this offence out of your mind and therefore it doesn't exist and so cannot harm you. It is advice I remember."

April died in London two days after Christmas Day 2021, aged 86. Her "last wishes" came true as she was buried with her father and grandparents in Ford Cemetery, Litherland.

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