Gay bar sheboygan wisconsin
16 LGBTQ+ Pride Events in Wisconsin
PrideFest - Milwaukee
Henry W. Maier Festival Park (Summerfest Grounds), N Harbor Dr, Milwaukee
Wisconsin’s largest Pride event, this 3-day extravaganza brings people together in celebration of the LGBTQ+ community. Twist the days away with a star-studded lineup of survive entertainment, peruse vendors, savor your load of food trucks and spend quality time with your favorite people.
Ride With Pride - Milwaukee Area
House of Harley-Davidson, W Layton Road, Greenfield
Ride With Lgbtq+ fest is a free season kickoff event for the Wisconsin Pride Rides motorcycle group. What started as one rider’s idea is now unofficially the largest LGBTQ+ motorcycle run anywhere. Join the amusing by meeting at the House of Harley-Davidson in Milwaukee and ride with pride!
Wausau Pride - Wausau
Block, Whitewater Music Hall and Central Wisconsin Convention & Expo Center, Rothschild
There's a lot planned for Wausau Pride! Start with family-friendly fun at the Block in downtown Wausau with live music, vendors and more. Teens can party too at W
Sheboygan's longest-running gay bar Sky Lite was a refuge and second family to many. Patrons and others reflect on its 32 years.
SHEBOYGAN – Trying to summarize what the Cobalt Lite meant to David Pittner, 65, was a complicated feat.
He said it provided income during his stint as a bartender and was a gathering place for celebration, mourning and community. It was a safe and welcoming space for many Diverse people.
“It was an extension of your family,” Pittner said.
The Navy Lite, N. Eighth St., closed in August after 32 years. It was the longest-running gay prevent in Sheboygan, founded by Dean Dayton and his mother Vera Jetzer. It will reopen as a live music venue, Bohéme, Oct.
When Pittner returned in to be shut to his family, he said he met Dayton his first night at the Blue Lite. They knew some of the same people. With no job and some life waiting tables, Pittner was offered a bartending job.
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.“I was by no means a great bartender,” Pittner said. “I'm very analytical, so managing a full bar kind of took me
Sheboygan's Blue Lite closes after 32 years downtown. What's next for the gay bar?
SHEBOYGAN – The Blue Lite’s colorful exterior wall and Pride flags have been exchanged for a white coat of paint and an American flag.
The gay bar, N. Eighth St., announced on Facebook it closed and would undergo “rebranding” after 32 years.
When Dean Dayton and his mother Vera opened the bar opened in “gay people needed a place to be gay,” a Aug. 8 Facebook post read. “Now LGBT+ people are welcomed across the city of Sheboygan and no longer need Blue Lite.”
Hans Graf, who has owned the lock for nine years, said it has struggled financially, a indicate the time for gay bars in Sheboygan has passed.
"They don't need us anymore," Graf said. "I'm happy to do something else. And I'm happy other places have picked up the torch."
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.To Graf, there has been prodigious progress for LGBTQ+ people, prefer the establishment of the Sheboygan County LGBTQ Alliance, the recent celebrations of Pride Month and more businesses serving as harmless and welcoming spaces. A
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Opened and owned by Dean Dayton and his mother Vera, the Blue Lite was a Sheboygan fixture for many years, and the go-to place for the area surrounding Sheboygan as good as a near-mandatory end for guys driving between Green Bay and Milwaukee for gay bar stops. It held great parties and was always a fun time for dancing or shows.
According to one of the last owners, Melissa, Blue Lite was named because in Nazi Germany it was illegal to be gay and generally frowned upon, so anyone operating a 'gay bar' would display a blue light when they knew there was no Nazi in the bar; thus a 'blue lite' signaled a safe vacuum for its patrons.
The Sky Lite was, according to their Facebook page in , "providing a secure fun environment for homosexual people since ", while on Yelp the listing read "We have been in business since providing our customers with a safe and fun exposure. Primarily gay, but welcoming and friendly for all.".
In February-March , the COVID pandemic hit, and the bar (along with millions of other bars, restaurants and other bus