Sunday, May 31, 2026

Oshkosh After Dark

In 1913, private detectives from the Wisconsin Vice Committee began slithering into Oshkosh. They came to infiltrate the city’s illicit sex scene. It was so easy. Oshkosh had been running hot for decades.

Main Street Oshkosh, early 1900s.

The operation began after the State Legislature established a committee to investigate Wisconsin’s white slave traffic. “White slavery” being a euphemism for sex trafficking. America was in the throes of moral panic over sex for hire. Nobody was more panicked than Howard Teasdale, head of the Wisconsin Vice Committee.

Howard Teasdale

Teasdale was a stout and dour man with a left eye set to permanent wink. He’d been elected to the State Senate in 1911 to represent Jackson, Juneau, and Monroe counties. Farm country. He was a hardcore moralist and an enemy of city life and its trappings. His political views were framed by his disdain for liquor and unlicensed sex. A rock-ribbed Methodist and workaholic, Teasdale appeared hell-bent on proving that everyone was having more fun than he was.

As captain of the vice committee, Teasdale hired private detectives to sneak around the state and sniff out commodified pleasure. He hoped to create a lurid exposé that would send a shock through the system. And in turn, build a groundswell of support for invasive policing to prosecute the erotic pursuits that he considered sinful.

Uncovering the goods in Oshkosh was literally a walk in the park. Teasdale complained that public parks were “dangerous to public morals” because they “furnish convenient places for immoral practices.” His anxiety was inflamed by what his men stumbled on in Oshkosh.

Waiting for Dark in Menominee Park.

Park & Ride
An investigator prowled Menominee Park on a warm evening in early summer. After midnight, the action became so heavy that he had to step around the “many” young couples feasting on one another in the picnic area. The romance in the meadow soured his mood. “There should be a special policeman for this park by all means,” the snoop complained to Teasdale.

South Park was just as lusty. The detective found young folks gathering there at dusk, preparing for an evening hook-up. Most were underage. The investigator claimed to have been approached by no fewer than eight young women offering him sex for a nominal fee. He saw couples making out on benches. Others were going at it on the grass. A young man he spoke to said that South Park was known as a "Lovers' Paradise." The detective confirmed that the park was “certainly on a level” with its reputation.

A Lovers' Paradise, South Park in the early 1900s.

The Tunnel
Lower Main Street had been crawling with hustlers for years. But Teasdale’s detectives managed to finger just one of their hot spots: the celebrated saloon at the northwest corner of Main and Marion (now Ceape) called the Tunnel Sample Room. The Tunnel in the name was a reference to the railroad corridor next door. The photo below, from the mid-1940s, is annotated with an arrow pointing into the train tunnel and a red dot at the entrance to the old Tunnel Sample Room.


That is long gone, but in 1913, this place was a gem. William Fenrich took over the saloon in 1904 and later installed a Palm Garden, hoping to attract more women into the place. Teasdale was haunted by the very thought of a Palm Garden. He referred to them as "infernos" of sin “commonly frequented by prostitutes seeking customers. They freely mingle with inexperienced young people, and moral contamination surely follows.”


The moral contamination at the Tunnel was spreading fast on the night when Teasdale’s sleuth slipped in. He clocked a pack of hustlers working the room. At least six women “were seen there to pick up men and go off with them.” Maybe they were on their way to this next place.

Calamity Jane’s
Ella Merry was a 60-year-old widow living on the 300 block of Division Street. She couldn’t get by on the Civil War pension she inherited from her late husband, Franklin. Yet she found a way to make ends meet. Ella's little home had a set of bedrooms at the back. She sublet them to couples seeking privacy. The lease expired upon the consummation of their endeavor.

The yellow floor plan illustrates the layout and location of Ella Merry’s home directly behind what is now Barley & Hops Pub and Beer Garden.

Ella was a legendary character among those in the know. They called her “Calamity Jane,” and she was proud of the service she provided. The Teasdale snoop who interviewed her seemed surprised by her candor. "She has a good trade for which she is well known," he reported with a note of grudging respect.

The Ozark Flats
This saloon and bawdy house was one of the longest-lived and most flagrant “hells” Oshkosh has ever produced. It was near the north bank of the river on what was then Light Street and is now the southernmost run of Division Street. “The Flats” began proffering liquor, gambling, and flesh in the mid-1890s. It had been gushing mayhem ever since.

The layout and approximate location of the Ozark Flats (#22).

The Ozark Flats occupied the middle unit of an ugly building next to ribbons of railroad track. It was wood-framed and wrapped in sheet iron to keep it from being ignited by sparks that popped off the rails. The main attraction was the women who made the place infamous for the pleasures they peddled in the adjoining rooms.

When the vice-sniffer came around, he found the place unusually quiet. He managed to get Pearl J., the madame of the place, to spill the beans. She told him that she usually kept 14 to 16 women busy at The Flats. At the moment, though, there were just six.

Teasdale had taken a special interest in the Ozark Flats. He wanted a scandal he could use to smear Martin T. Battis, a political foe from Oshkosh. Battis had an ownership stake in the property where the rent was charged at five times the going rate. A typical predicament for a brothel.

M.T. Battis, in the light suit, hanging out on Main Street in the early 1930s.

Battis was elected to the Wisconsin State Assembly in 1912 and was considered a rising political force. And he was stridently opposed to everything Teasdale was fighting for. Battis was also rumored to be behind a conspiracy to put a lid on the flesh trade in Oshkosh while Teasdale’s men were here. In the end, Battis seems to have outfoxed his rival. Teasdale failed to make hay from Battis’ connection to The Flats.

Ethel Miller’s Brothel
Teasdale’s detective headed for the Southside and Ethel Miller. The veteran sex worker was born in Illinois in 1875 or 1876. She hit the bricks as an Oshkosh streetwalker in the early 1900s. Ethel later joined Frankie Howard’s stable. Frankie had been in the underworld trenches for more than 20 years as both a street hustler and a house madame. Ethel bought Frankie’s brothel in 1909. The place operated out of a large home on 6th Avenue, just east of Nebraska Street.

The layout and location of Ethel Miller’s brothel on 6th Avenue.

The detective reported that Ethel had just two women working for her. She may have deceived him. Ethel was known to house as many as six inmates, along with a middle-aged housekeeper willing to turn tricks in a pinch. In any case, Ethel told the undercover operator that, at the moment, there was no room for him at her inn. She sent him on his way, saying he could come back later if he wished. He didn’t. Good riddance.

Ella Stewart’s Sporting House
There was a warmer reception a block away on 7th Avenue. A saucy sporting house was there just around the corner from what is now Bottoms Up bar. The owner was Ella Stewart, an Illinois expat by way of Milwaukee. Ella was 54 and widowed when she moved to Oshkosh in 1909 to take the helm of a bawdy house that had been launched several years earlier by a hustler named Ollie May.

Ella Stewart's Sporting House was located at what is now 133 W. 7th Avenue, the current site of M.P. Kelly Plumbing.

Ella had seven women working in her brothel. This wasn’t a come-and-go joint. Ella’s place included a parlor saloon where she sold beer and whiskey. Guests were encouraged to linger in the parlor before and after conducting their affairs. A bottle of beer cost 50 cents. The romance went for $2 a pop, or about $50 in today's money.

Teasdale assumed that his crusade would lead to the shaming and rejection of women like Ella Stewart. From his cloistered point of view, that probably made sense. But Ella Stewart was never shunned. Her family members, including her widowed father, her siblings, and their children, often visited and stayed with Ella at her brothel on 7th Avenue. Her situation allowed her to support them when they were ill or in need. Of course, none of this made its way into Teasdale’s report.

Emma Grave’s Place
Teasdale's report also had little to say about the tactics of his investigators. They had been vetted by the American Social Hygiene Association, a group dedicated to fighting venereal disease with scare tactics and moral stigma. So it’s probably safe to say that the Teasdale squad didn’t go to the extent of pressing flesh during their carousing.

A poster from the American Social Hygiene Association.

At Emma Graves’ place, we see how these guys operated. The investigator told Emma he was shopping for sex and wanted to know what she offered. Emma gave him the tour. The snoop described it as “a regular parlor sporting house with three inmates and a hustling housekeeper.” At $2 a toss, Emma was charging the standard rate.

The Teasdale man said he’d be back. Emma told him to bring his co-workers, too. She probably thought nothing of the encounter. Emma Graves had seen it all by then. She had opened her brothel on 8th Avenue in 1903 when she was about 25 years old.

The layout and location of Emma Graves brothel, just around the corner from Houge’s Bar.

1903 was a fine time to get into the flesh trade in Oshkosh. The city was allowing its brothels to run wide open. There was one hitch. The keepers were ticketed at least once a year for selling liquor without a license. The Daily Northwestern complained about “the city’s method of legalizing disreputable houses” to boost the city’s coffers. But most folks seemed OK with it. Emma Graves paid her fines and was left to conduct her business as she saw fit.

Pick-Up on Nebraska Street
The private investigation of Oshkosh vice turned into something more like a stroll through a public market. Half a block away from Emma Graves’ house, an investigator ran into three couples leaving a bar at 8th and Nebraska. He correctly assumed that the women were hustlers. He asked if he could get in on the action. He was denied, but told to try again later, "If he had the price." He learned that they were headed up to Jess Gokey’s place in the Town of Oshkosh. The Teasdale man followed.

The saloon (no longer standing) at the northwest 8th and Nebraska where the Teasdale man met three couples headed for Gokey’s. This was taken about 40 years after the encounter.

Gokey’s Roadhouse
Jesse Gokey enjoyed a long and sleazy career as a saloon keeper and pimp. His freak flag flew at the Ozark Flats and what is now Oblio’s. But those are earlier and dirtier stories for another day. In 1913, Gokey was running a roadhouse in what was then the Town of Oshkosh. He called it the Way Side Inn. It was the last stop on the way to what is now the Winnebago Mental Health Institute. In Gokey’s day, it was called the Northern Hospital for the Insane. Gokey’s advertising advised the unwell to “Drop in on your way to the State Hospital and he will save your life.”

The Cheatin’ Heart Bar now resides at the former site of Gokey’s Way Side Inn.

Gokey’s roadhouse saloon doubled as a coitus resort. Hustlers would pick up men and lead them to Gokey's for a few drinks, followed by a copulation session in one of the “neatly furnished bedrooms.” Due in no small part to Gokey, the Town of Oshkosh voted itself dry in 1911. So every bit of what was going down there in 1913 was patently illegal.

That Town of Oshkosh dry decree seemed to whet the township’s appetite for vice. By 1913, there were at least four roadhouse saloons in the Town of Oshkosh linked to the sex trade. The Teasdale snoop found his way into another of them about half a mile south of Gokey’s place.

Ella Cass’ Roadhouse Brothel

Ginger Snaps at 2314 Harrison Street where Ella Cass ran a brothel and roadhouse.

Teasdale’s detective was impressed by Ella’s place. This is from his notes...
"On the first floor is a neat bar room, at the side of which there is a large wine room. In the wine room there is an electric slot piano and a nickel in the slot gambling device. Upstairs are furnished rooms let to couples for assignation purposes, price $1 to $1.50. They have no license, but found them drinking whiskey and what appeared to be brandy. A young woman was tending bar. Bought a bottle of beer, 25¢. Said they had to ask that because of the risk they took in selling it to accommodate their friends."
The woman in charge was a storied Oshkosh lady of pleasure named Ella Cass. Ella was born in Iowa, but had been around Oshkosh selling carnal delights since at least 1900. She had previously operated brothels on 7th Avenue and on State Street. She even found time to establish satellite love shacks in Appleton, Neenah, and Lincoln, Nebraska. A busy lady.

Ella set up shop at the Harrison Street roadhouse in late 1912. When the Teasdale detective dropped in, she had two women turning tricks in the roadhouse’s “furnished rooms.” Ella never liked to hang around any place for too long, though. By 1916, she was done with the roadhouse on Harrison. The property was later sold to Rudolph and Olive Foelsch. Rudy died a few years later, but Olive continued the tradition, selling amour there well into the 1940s.

Olive Foelsch’s Harrison Bar and love nest in the 1940s.

The Dirty Laundry
Beginning in January 1914, Teasdale held a series of hearings across the state to report his findings. It turned into a humiliation tour. In city after city, Teasdale was derided for his meddling, his methods, and his zealotry. He took his lumps in Oshkosh on June 30, 1914.

Oshkosh Daily Northwestern, June 30, 1914.

The hearing began on a Tuesday morning at City Hall. Teasdale and his crew came armed with a pile of photos and revealing evidence. But his typical bluster and moralising were under wraps. He began the day praising city officials for the progress they had made in cleaning up this notoriously wicked city. He probably came to regret that.

The first set of “witnesses” included local physicians and clergymen. Most of them shared Teasdale’s view of sex as a filthy compulsion in need of regulation by people like him. They favored eugenics and enforced sterilization. Teasdale was in his element. And then Frank Stein crashed the party.

Stein had recently opened a women’s clothing store on Main Street called the Style Inn. Most of those who worked there were women. Teasdale’s narrow mind struggled with the idea that some women preferred selling sex over conventional work. He hoped a guy like Stein might have an acceptable explanation. Stein was the wrong guy to ask.

Frank Stein (standing near center of image) with workers from his store.

He came out swinging: “I want you to know that I am not in accord with this investigation,” Stein began. He told Teasdale that his committee was doing more harm than good. That he didn’t like the way Teasdale “tried to make out that every girl was a prostitute." He told Teasdale that he ought to hear what people were saying about him behind his back. Teasdale got pissed and threatened to charge Stein with contempt. But Stein refused to be intimidated. The senator was struggling.

It didn’t get any better. Teasdale brought through a parade of local officials. They toyed with him. Municipal Court Judge Arthur Goss gave him a thorough gaslighting. Goss said that since the launch of the vice campaign, his court had handled more cases concerning brothels and sex workers than at any time in the past 20 years. In fact, the opposite appears to be true. Court reports indicate such prosecutions had decreased since the start of Teasdale’s investigation.

Judge Goss, circa 1913.

When Police Chief Henry Dowling came up, Teasdale grilled him about sex in the parks. And how the Oshkosh pool rooms were filled with teenagers. Dowling brushed him off, saying the police were criticized for everything and given credit for nothing. Teasdale’s agitation grew. He demanded to know if Dowling was aware that young men were hanging out in the pool rooms. “I believe they are,” Dowling casually replied. Teasdales kept at him. Are you aware that it’s illegal for minors to visit pool rooms? “Yes, I suppose so,” Dowling said with total disinterest. It was the chief's way of politely telling the senator to go fuck himself.

Oshkosh Police Chief Henry Dowling.

It went on like this, from the Oshosh mayor to the city attorney. Teasdale’s righteousness smothered in the bog of their indifference. He was worn out and angry by the time he got to Thomas McCool, Chairman of the Town of Oshkosh.

Thomas McCool, Town of Oshkosh Board Chairman.

Teasdale lit into McCool about the rampant prostitution in the township’s roadhouses. McCool was either subnormal or adept at playing the part. He responded by saying he didn’t know what a roadhouse was. Teasdale couldn’t take any more of this. He raged at McCool, warning him that if he didn’t clean-up the township, the state would. Another threat that fell flat. Teasdale was finished. He rode the morning train out of town.

The Vice Committee's final report was submitted on December 2, 1914. Teasdale's obsession with alcohol won out. The report concluded that demon rum was the cause of it all. And Prohibition the only solution. A hard sell in a state like Wisconsin. Impossible in a city like Oshkosh. The recommendations in the report were ignored. The hustlers and brothels of Oshkosh endured.

        “Certain disorderly houses are being conducted on the sly.”
               February 10, 1915, Oshkosh Daily Northwestern.

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Sunday, April 26, 2026

Lemberger’s Tavern and the End of the Old Sixth Ward

John Lemberger took over the oldest tavern in the old Sixth Ward in 1935. The place had been there for 60 years. The bar had laid the foundation for the bloody reputation of the ward that grew up around it. But in 1935, the unruly past was put to bed.

John Lemberger, on the left dressed in white, 1935. Northeast corner of Sixth & Ohio.

John Lemberger had the Southside in his blood. His parents, Johann and Eleanor, migrated from Bohemia in 1889. They arrived in America on the same day: April 1, 1889. They were married in Oshkosh 28 days later.

The Lembergers settled into a house near 11th and Ohio, when the original Sixth Ward extended south all the way down to 18th. The neighborhood was filled with people like them, Bohemian and Bavarian immigrants. In Oshkosh, they were called Highholders.

Teen-aged John Lemberger on the right. His father, Johann, stands next to him. On the left is John Kloiber, John’s brother-in-law.

John Lemberger was born in 1902, the sixth of the family's seven children. He led a textbook Southside childhood. John grew up speaking German and quit school after the eighth grade. He got his first taste of the saloon life from a brother. Adolph Lemberger was 10 years older than young John. His saloon at the corner of 9th and Knapp was owned by the Miller Brewing Company.

Adolph Lemberger behind the bar of his saloon at the northwest corner of 9th and Knapp.

With Prohibition looming, Adolph ditched his bar and jumped into frog farming. He started in Oshkosh and then launched a frog farm near Brandon, in Fond du Lac County. Young John followed him there.

Frogs and more. Adolph (left) and John with rabbits at the frog farm near Brandon.

Just up the road, in Metomen, was a farm run by a Hungarian immigrant named Joe Nickolaus. He had a daughter named Theresa. They called her Peggy. John Lemberger jumped the ethnic fence. He and Peggy were married in 1924.

John & Peggy (Theresa) Lemberger.

The Great Depression crippled commercial frog farming. John set out to find work in Minnesota. But by the summer of 1932, he and Peggy were back in Oshkosh. They had a son now. And like many, they struggled to get by. John was helping his nephew Bill, son of Adolph, build a frog farm on South Park Avenue when he caught a break.

Lemberger’s Tavern
The former speakeasy at Sixth and Ohio had gone legal with the end of Prohibition in 1933. The name changed from The Cardinal to The Rialto and was run by a lifelong Oshkosher named Earl "Sam" Sommerfeld.

The Rialto at the northeast corner of Sixth and Ohio, 1935. John Lemberger leans against the front of the building.

Sam Sommerfeld ran the bar, but the property was owned by George Utecht. Utecht had his own tavern up the street at what is now 413 Ohio. Sommerfeld wanted out of his lease. John Lemberger wanted to give it a shot. So in June 1935, Sam walked out, and John and Peggy walked in.

John and Peggy in front of their tavern.

Despite, or perhaps because of, the lingering pinch of the Great Depression, Oshkosh taverns endured the economic ruin better than most local businesses. Each Thursday and Saturday, the Daily Northwestern was thick with tavern ads promising affordable diversions from the difficult times.

A 1935 sampling of Oshkosh tavern advertising in the Daily Northwestern.

One tavern, though, was consistantly missing from the listings: Lemberger’s. John Lemberger cultivated his clientele in a more personal way. The same way John Lueck had when he opened the first saloon in that building in 1875.

The Lemberger Tavern acted as the locus for the social life of the neighborhood assembled around it. There was more than a tavern there. The back quarter of the building was occupied by a German-speaking, singing barber named Steve Young. Haircuts for a quarter.

An Oshkosh Centennial couple standing next to Steve Young’s barber pole at what is now 518 Ohio Street.

The building’s east wing housed a grocery store run by a Swede named Lenas Larson. He was brought into the fold by his Highholder wife, Agnes Kellerman.

The storefront of Larson’s grocery store is visible to the right of the two young men.

Kellerman, Kloiber, Matsche, Sippl, Demler, Drexler… Well-worn Highholder names. Families that had been in the Old Sixth Ward for a couple of generations. Most of the men worked in the mills, just as their fathers had. Over the years, they cross-pollinated to the extent that many were now related. An intricate web. You had to watch your mouth in the Sixth Ward. You might be talking about somebody’s cousin.


This was John and Peggy Lemberger’s tribe. Most of the folks around them were barely getting by. Especially the mill workers, who saw their wages and then their jobs cut. The Lembergers helped out with money and other favors when they could afford to. And increasingly they could.

The annual harvest display at Lemberger’s. “It was all about family, neighbors, and hunting.” Especially during the Great Depression, when deer hunting went from sport to necessity as a way to help feed a family.

John and Mary Matsche with John Lemberger (on the right).

The Lembergers were doing well enough by 1940 to buy the property from George Utecht. They got it on a land contract for $6,000 (about $135,000 in today’s money). They made it their home in 1942. John and Peggy and their son, John, moved from their apartment on Ohio Street into the apartment above the tavern.

John Lemberger relaxing in his living room over the tavern.

When the Lembergers moved in, Lenas Larson moved his grocery out. The Lembergers changed the space into a dining room. But more like the dining room in a home than a restaurant. Everybody called it the side room. It was casual, homey.

A gathering in the side room.

Sundays after church, the side room would host the older guys from the neighborhood. They’d sit around, play cards and chew the fat. One by one, they’d get the phone call from home telling them dinner was ready. John would call out from the bar, and the guy would get up and go.

 John & Peggy behind their bar, 1953.

Next to the side room was a small kitchen. Peggy was an excellent cook. There was no menu. You ate whatever she was making that day. Chili. Frog legs. Roast beef. Smoked chubs. One time, after a hunting trip went awry, they ended up with a whole hog. So they had a pig roast.

Peggy Lemberger, 1944.

John’s father, Johann, was one of the older guys who came by. He was a widower living on 11th. Old Man Lemmy, they called him. His main bar was Utecht’s. But he’d stop in at his son’s place for a beer on his way home.

Old Man Lemmy crossing Ohio Street on his way to Lemberger’s.

In the early 1900s, Lemberger’s Tavern had been owned by the Oshkosh Brewing Company. Back then, the only beer served there came from OBC. Prohibition ended that. When John Lemberger stepped in, he turned it into a Peoples Beer tavern.

John Lemberger pouring Peoples Beer.

Across Sixth Avenue was a tavern called the Argonne where Chief Oshkosh was the main beer. Each tavern was garnished with a flashing sign declaring its allegiance.

The corner bars at Sixth and Ohio. Lemberger’s on the left with its Peoples sign, and the brick Argonne with its Chief Oshkosh sign.

On weekends, the place would fill with neighbors. A lot of cousins and second cousins. No TVs. Just talk and shouts of laughter. A blue haze of cigarette smoke. Scenes like this had been playing out on that corner for more than 75 years.


Nothing lasts. John and Peggy grew older. The daily grind grew to be too much. Twenty-five years of it was enough. On March 2, 1960, they signed away their liquor license and left the bar. John was 58, Peggy was 56.

John and Peggy dancing away in silver shoes.

The tavern remained open for another three years. But without John and Peggy, it wasn’t the same. It was called the Dutchman's Place, at first, and then Widmer’s Bar after that.

1961 / 1962.

In 1963, the liquor license lapsed and that was the end. After 88 years, there was no longer a bar at the northeast corner of 6th and Ohio. The closing of the first saloon in the Old Sixth Ward presaged the break-up of the ward itself.

The End of the Old Sixth Ward
The deep history of this tavern was forgotten years before it closed. The Bloody Sixth Ward rose up so furiously that its early days were left in the dust. It didn’t help that the published histories of Oshkosh favored the north side of the city. The past grew dimmer, yet, when the Sixth Ward dissolved.

The old ward system in Oshkosh was baked into the city’s 1853 charter. It established a mayor-alderman form of government. Each ward was represented by a single alderman. In 1957, Oshkosh converted to a council-manager system. The old wards were made redundant. Ward numbers still appeared on property-tax bills and deeds, but the wards no longer carried political weight, or fostered the neighborhood bonding that came with it.

The final undoing began in 1965 when the city announced a reapportionment plan to split the old wards into voting districts. “Oshkosh Wards would be virtually consigned to limbo,” The Daily Northwestern reported. The Bloody Sixth Ward was dissolved, scattered into the new voting districts.

The territory of the original Sixth Ward of 1871 split into what are now voting wards 11, 18, 19, 20 and 21.

It took an Old Sixth Warder to remind people of a culture that had been discarded by fiat. Clarence “Inky” Jungwirth didn’t come with an agenda. He simply wanted to tell the story of the place where he was raised. Inky was born in 1919 and grew up on the Southside, hearing stories about the rough and rowdy ways of the Old Sixth Ward.

Clarence “Inky” Jungwirth

Inky made his living working at Oshkosh Truck. But his avocation was history, especially the fleeting history of the Southside streets where he spent his boyhood. In 1991, at the age of 72, Inky self-published his first book, A History of the “Bloody Sixth Ward” In the City of Oshkosh.


This wasn’t like the Oshkosh histories written from a Northside perspective. Inky made that absolutely clear at the start. “This book is written in the Sixth Ward Dialect and does not always meet the rules of English Language,” he wrote in his opening notes.

A History of the “Bloody Sixth Ward” was an immediate success. The book sold almost 2,000 copies in its first six months and established Inky as the Historian Laureate of the Southside. Inky put the Bloody Sixth Ward back on the map.

The Frogs
After closing their tavern, John and Peggy went on living in the apartment above the bar. But John’s world was expanding. At 59, he revisited a pursuit of his youth: frogs. Lemberger took a job with his nephew Bill, son of Adolph, whose biological supply company sold frogs and other leaping and crawling creatures. John Lemberger hunted them in the southern U.S. and Mexico.

Life after the tavern. John Lemberger flanked by friends.

John’s grandson, also named John, was often his travelling companion. “I remember going to Louisiana with him once looking for locusts,” John recalls. “In Wisconsin, we would drive all the way up as far north as Wittenberg and buy frogs from the farm kids.”

Three generations of John Lemberger. On the right is John Lemberger. His son, John, is on the left. His grandson, John, is between them.

John Lemberger died after a brief illness in 1965. “That was a really hard period for me,” his grandson John recalls. “We fished and hunted together, and we would go on those frog routes, and I’d spend the whole day with him. He was my best friend. They had the funeral at Poklasny, when it was still on Ohio. I heard that Mr. Poklasny said it was the biggest funeral he had ever seen.”

Peggy stayed on in the apartment above the old bar. After the tavern license expired, she ran an ice cream parlor for a year or so in the side room. She also devoted time to charity work helping disabled children. Peggy died in 1971. John and Peggy Lemberger are buried in Calvary Catholic Cemetery in Oshkosh.

Calvary Catholic Cemetery, Oshkosh.

The former home of the Lemberger Tavern now contains a salon, and a boutique selling mystical gems.

Sixth and Ohio today.

You would never guess that this modest building had such a formative role in the rising of the Old Sixth Ward. This was the Sixth Ward’s first saloon and where the spirit of that place was kindled into something unique.

Inky gets the last word…
The people of the Sixth Ward typified the spirit of the German word "Gemutlichkeit" which means cordiality and reputation for friendliness. There is another German word for this attitude which is "Gemeinschaft'' which means a spontaneously arising organic social relationship characterized by strong reciprocal bonds of sentiment and kinship with a common tradition. This is what the 6th Ward was all about.
             – Clarence "Inky" Jungwirth


A word of thanks…
John Lemberger’s grandson, John, contacted me last November and asked if I had any information about the Lemberger Tavern. I told him I did and that I planned to write about it sometime in the future. He suggested I get going on it. I’m grateful for that! This third installment would not have amounted to much without his help. John was the main source for most of the photos and Lemberger family history that appears here. Thanks John!

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This is the third in a three-part series of posts about the saloons, speakeasies, and taverns at the northeast corner of 6th and Ohio and their significance to the old Sixth Ward of Oshkosh.
Here are links to the three posts in this series.