This Is It! – Photo: Wisconsin LGBTQ History Project
This Is It!, Wisconsin’s oldest gay bar, which permanently closed in March 2025, will be recognized as a historic landmark. State preservation officers with the Wisconsin Historical Society approved a historic marker for the site on March 4.
The now-shuttered bar will be the second LGBTQ landmark recognized in Wisconsin. The first was the former Black Nite tavern in Milwaukee, which the state recognized in 2024.
“For decades, ‘This Is It’ was part of Wisconsin’s cultural landscape, serving as an important gathering place for the LGBTQ community,” Angela Titus, assistant deputy director and chief program officer for the Wisconsin Historical Society, said in a statement. “This new historical marker will ensure that the story of this beloved community space, and the role it played in the state’s history, will be preserved for future generations.”
Founded by June Brehm and Michael Latona, This Is It! opened in August 1968, a year before the Stonewall Uprising in New York City, widely considered the seminal moment in the modern LGBTQ rights movement.
Prior to her death in 2010, Brehm said that as a longtime service industry worker she saw how society treated gay people and decided to open a bar where they would feel safe, welcome, and respected.
“June was discouraged — even by her gay friends — against opening This Is It!,” Michail Takach, chair of the Wisconsin LGBTQ History Project, said in a statement. “They told her she was crazy; they told her she would get herself in trouble. Her response was, ‘So what? Let them come for me.’ Nobody ever came for June, but nearly 60 years later, her decision to stand up for what’s right still stands as a lesson for us all.”
Following Brehm’s death, her son Joe, who died in 2016, and employee-turned-owner Georg Schneider carried her vision forward, expanding the bar and welcoming a more diverse clientele, including members of Milwaukee’s ballroom community.
The historic marker will be installed in a publicly accessible location outside the bar, which stood at 418 E. Wells St. in Milwaukee for 57 years. Installation is expected this summer, with a dedication ceremony to be announced later.
All funding for the project, including installation and maintenance, will be paid through private donations, requiring no taxpayer funding.
“This historic marker honors a place that my family worked very long and very hard to build, sustain, and protect for Milwaukee,” Sarah Freiheit, Brehm’s granddaughter, said in a statement. “When the outside world believed gay men had no place in the world, my grandmother vowed to create one for them. For decades, This Is It! was the go-to destination in times of crisis, in times of celebration, and those times when just being with your community was the best possible comfort.”
Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers vetoed five anti-LGBTQ bills passed by the state’s Republican-led legislature.
The bills would have barred transgender athletes assigned male at birth from competing on female-designated sports teams in both K-12 schools and colleges; required school boards to adopt policies forcing teachers to out transgender students to their parents and obtain permission before allowing changes to names or pronouns; prohibited minors from accessing gender-affirming care; and allowed people who experience "regret" after such care to sue providers until age 33.
"Team DC is the network of LGBTQ+ sports in the D.C. metro area," says Miguel Ayala, president of the nonprofit, which has served as the umbrella organization for LGBTQ sports since 1990.
"We represent over 49 different teams and leagues -- everything from kickball, football, and volleyball, which are some of our larger groups, to things like birding, rodeo, and billiards, and even recreational or group activities that you might not think of as sports," he says.
The organization serves as a resource for LGBTQ sporting and recreational groups, helping them navigate the logistics of running a league -- everything from establishing bylaws and a governing board to setting up a website and social media accounts to promote schedules and off-field events like social mixers or fundraisers.
Miss International Queen USA, one of the nation’s largest competitions for transgender women, is bringing its national finals to Atlantic City later this month. The two-night event, set for March 26 and 27 at Harrah’s Resort Atlantic City, blends glamour and advocacy with a focus on visibility in the historic pageant town.
Among the contestants is Veronica Sibal, a registered nurse representing the DMV area. A mental health advocate within the transgender community, she sees the pageant as an important platform.
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