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Summer to Be Seen amplifies Wisconsin LGBTQ voices – 2025 State Tour

Milwaukee, WI. –  Today, May 12, 2025, the Wisconsin LGBTQ History Project announced the return of the Summer to Be Seen Tour, a statewide outreach program that will bring LGBTQ history and heritage exhibits to over a dozen hometown pride celebrations throughout Wisconsin.

This year’s tour, which kicks off Friday, June 6 in Green Bay, will visit pride events in Hurley/Ironwood, Viroqua, Stevens Point, Marshfield, Eau Claire, Sheboygan, Port Washington, Fond du Lac, Kenosha, Watertown and Milwaukee, before an August closing party in Madison.

The Summer to Be Seen Tour was launched in 2024 as a 30th anniversary celebration for the History Project. Founded in June 1994 by local organizers and Jim Kepner of the ONE Institute, the History Project hosted interactive exhibits for 25 years at PrideFest Milwaukee.

“In 1994, people had to travel to big cities to celebrate pride,” said Michail Takach, Board Chair. “Prior to 1988, even Milwaukee did not have annual celebrations, so people had to travel to Chicago.”

“Our Summer to Be Seen Tour recognizes that there are now vibrant, diverse, and extremely hard-working pride organizations in every corner of Wisconsin. People want to be proud in their hometowns, where they live, work, and love, and we want to support that spirit of wanting to be seen.”

The Summer to Be Seen Tour reconnects Wisconsin with histories not taught in schools or families, amplifies LGBTQ voices and visibility, curates local stories for further research, and inspires advocacy for inclusive and accessible history.

This year’s tour seeks to interview LGBTQ elders, who were on the frontlines of the liberation movement long before “pride” was even possible, especially those outside Milwaukee and Madison. Thanks to a generous grant from the Canary Fund, the Project will be celebrating these pioneers with a traveling LGBTQ History Month exhibit in October.

“During last summer’s travels, we saw the changing faces of pride from Mineral Point to Door County, from Superior to Ripon, from Platteville to Rhinelander. And we learned more from these communities than we could ever teach them,” said Diane Gregory, program director.

Being seen — and building strong coalitions — are especially important for the History Project, especially as LGBTQ history is at ongoing risk of erasure within the federal government.

“It’s never been more important to protect our past, while confronting the realities of our present,” said Nicole Kurth, program director.

“Together, we are truly unstoppable.”

The Project is now recruiting volunteers and event interns to staff tour stops throughout June and July.

The Summer to Be Seen Tour was self-funded by ongoing fundraising efforts, and supported by a generous public history grant from the LGBTQ+ History Association.

Questions? Contact the Wisconsin LGBTQ History Project to learn more.

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About the Wisconsin LGBTQ History Project

Relentless. Inspired. Independent. Founded by Don Schwamb, the Wisconsin LGBTQ History Project seeks to reconnect Wisconsin with its hidden history and heritage. Since 1994, the Project has partnered with the University of Wisconsin Archives to create the state’s largest digital collection of historical LGBTQ media. Our ongoing work honors the memory of Louis Stimac, Wisconsin’s first true LGBTQ historian.

The Wisconsin LGBTQ History Project Inc. is powered entirely through the work of volunteers. We are an independent non-profit organization organized and operated exclusively for the purposes of education, charitable giving, and public good, as defined in section 501(c)3 of the Internal Revenue Code.

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