History of Omaha, Nebraska
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The history of Omaha, Nebraska began before the settlement of the city, with speculators from neighboring Council Bluffs, Iowa staking land across the Missouri River illegally as early as the 1840s. Before it was legal to claim land in Indian Country, William D. Brown was operating the Lone Tree Ferry to bring settlers from Council Bluffs to Omaha. A treaty with the Omaha Tribe allowed the creation of the Nebraska Territory, and Omaha City was founded on July 4, 1854. With early settlement came claim jumpers and squatters, and the formation of a vigilante law group called the Omaha Claim Club, which was one of many claim clubs across the Midwest. During this period many of the city's founding fathers received lots in Scriptown, which was made possible by the actions of the Omaha Claim Club. The club's violent actions led to the U.S. Supreme Court trial, Baker v. Morton, which led to the end of the organization.
Surrounded by small towns and cities that competed for business from the hinterland's farmers, the city suffered a major setback in the Panic of 1857. Despite this, Omaha quickly emerged as the largest city in Nebraska. After losing the Nebraska State Capitol to Lincoln in 1867, many business leaders rallied and created the Jobbers Canyon in downtown Omaha to outfit farmers in Nebraska, South Dakota, Wyoming and further west. Their entrepreneurial success allowed them to build mansions in Kountze Place and the Old Gold Coast neighborhoods.
With the development of the Omaha Stockyards and neighboring packinghouses in the 1870s, several workers' housing areas, including Sheelytown, developed around South Omaha. Its growth happened so quickly that the town was nicknamed the "Magic City". The latter part of the 19th century also saw the formation of several fraternal organizations, including the formation of Knights of Aksarben. City leaders rallied for the creation of the Trans-Mississippi Exposition in 1898. During the Expo, famous madams Anna Wilson and Ada Everleigh were making a living from the crowds. At the same time, Boss Tom Dennison compounded the city's vices in the notorious Sporting District, with the full support of eight-term mayor "Cowboy" James Dahlman. Many of these early pioneers are buried in Prospect Hill Cemetery. City leaders created Omaha University in 1908.
With reform administrations in the 1930s and 40s, the city became a meatpacking powerhouse, along as a home for several regional beer breweries, including Metz, Storz and Krug companies. The city's southern suburb became home to the Strategic Air Command in the late 1940s; in 1950 the Rosenblatt Stadium in South Omaha became home to the College World Series. Labor unrest from the 1930s gave way to racial unrest in the 1950s, which led to the formation of the city's Civil Rights movement. White flight led to the development of West Omaha from the 1950s through the 1970s, while the historically ethnically diverse areas of North and South Omaha became homogenized racially and economically.
Contents |
[edit] White contact with Native Americans
Omaha's location near the confluence of the Missouri River and Platte River has long made the location a key point of transfer for both people and goods. Since the 1600's, the Pawnee, Otoe, Sioux, and Ioway all variously occupied the land that became Omaha. During the late 1700s and early 1800s when they were the most powerful Indians along the stretch of the Missouri River north of the Platte, the Omaha nation moved on the western edge of present-day Bellevue, Nebraska.
Prior to European American establishment of the city, numerous Indian tribes had inhabited the area, including the the Pawnee, Otoe, Sioux, the Missouri and Ioway all variously occupied the land that became Omaha. They had developed a semi-nomadic lifestyle necessary for survival on the Great Plains. The Pawnee and Otoe tribes had inhabited the region for hundreds of years by the time the Omaha tribe had arrived from the south in the early 1700s. Translated, the word "Omaha" (actually U-Mo'n-Ho'n) means "Dwellers on the Bluff".[1] Usually the word is translated "against the current", but in those cases without quoting any source.
After a smallpox outbreak, and suffering cultural degradation, disease, the elimination of the buffalo, and continued property loss, in 1856 the Omaha sold the last of their claims and relocated to their present reservation north in Thurston County, Nebraska.
[edit] European settlement
On July 21, 1804, the Lewis and Clark Expedition passed by the riverbanks that would later become the city of Omaha. On July 22 the Corps of Discovery established a camp near present-day Bellevue for five nights, naming it "Camp White Catfish." On the 27th William Clark and Reuben Fields investigated mysterious earthen mounds close to where 8th and Douglas Streets and the Heartland of America Park are today in Downtown Omaha. That night they camped in an area that is Eppley Airfield today.[2] The expedition stopped at a point about 20 miles (30 km) north of present-day Omaha, at which point they first met with the Otoe. They had a council meeting with members of the tribal leadership on the west side of the Missouri River. The first recorded instance of a black person in the Omaha area was "York", an enslaved African American who accompanied William Clark on the Expedition.
The Astor Expedition came through in 1811. Stephen Long passed through the Omaha area in 1819 on his Platte River Expedition. A decade later, adventurers and fur traders were frequenting the region, trading at Fort Lisa, built by Manuel Lisa in 1806; Fort Atkinson, built in 1819 as a military outpost adjacent to the location of the earlier council meeting; and Cabanne's Trading Post, built by the American Fur Company in 1822.
In 1825 a fur trader named J.B. Royce built a stockade and trading post on a plateau near the present-day block formed by Dodge Street and Capitol Avenue, Ninth and Tenth Streets.[3] That establishment was abandoned and decayed within the next 20 years.[4]
In the 1840s the Mormons built a town called Cutler's Park in the area before resuming their westward migration on the Mormon Trail.[5]
In 1854 Logan Fontenelle and the Omaha Tribe sold the majority of their tribal land, four million acres (16,000 km²), to the United States for less than 22 cents an acre. This allowed the settlement of Nebraska Territory and the founding of Omaha City.[6] That year the formation of the Territory in the Kansas-Nebraska Act was based on the condition that it remain slave-free.
[edit] Pioneer Omaha: 1853 to 1867
- Further information: Pioneer history of Omaha (category)
In 1853 William Brown operated the Lone Tree Ferry to shuttle California Gold Rush prospectors and Oregon Trail settlers across the river between Kanesville, Iowa and the Nebraska Territory. The Lone Tree Ferry eventually became the Council Bluffs and Nebraska Ferry Company. "Omaha City" was organized by the owners of the Council Bluffs & Nebraska Ferry Company to lure the proposed transcontinental railroad to Council Bluffs. Alfred D. Jones, Omaha City's first postmaster, platted the town site early in 1854, months after the Kansas-Nebraska Act created the Nebraska Territory.[7] The first black person in Omaha arrived in 1854.
While the city was young, there were no formal police or sheriff, or at least one with any significant authority. Compensating for the absence of the law, many early Omaha pioneers formed a claim club to create and enforce a legal system to their advantage. The Omaha Claim Club took authority over many areas of the new city, generally focused on land-related issues. In the 1860s, ten years after the city's formation, early citizens also created the Old Settlers' Association to record the early history of the settlement.
Aside from Omaha, other early settlements and towns in the area include Fontenelle's Post founded in 1806; Fort Lisa founded 1806; Culter's Park, founded 1846; Bellevue, settled in 1804 and founded 1853; East Omaha, founded 185?; and Saratoga, founded 1857. The town of Florence was platted by James C. Mitchell in 1854 and founded in 1855.
The first minister in Omaha was Moses F. Shinn, a Methodist Episcopal Church leader from Council Bluffs.[8] Most of Omaha's early pioneers, including Nebraska Territory politicians, soldiers from Fort Omaha and the early African-American community, were buried at Prospect Hill Cemetery in North Omaha. Starting in 1887 Douglas County officials started recording the burials of poor people and people without a known identity in Potter's Field. Located in far North Omaha, today Potter's Field is maintained by Forest Lawn Cemetery, which is located nearby. There is speculation that Mormon pioneers were buried there in the 1850s, as well.
The Nebraska State Capitol was moved from Omaha in 1867.
[edit] Nebraska Territory Capitol
Late in 1854 Omaha was chosen as the territorial capital for Nebraska. In 1855 during a land grab a group of businessmen formed the Omaha Land Company and platted Scriptown to reward Nebraska Territory legislators for their votes for statehood. After Baker v. Morton in 1857, this type of land baron-like behavior was made illegal; by that time lots had been developed and Scriptown quickly became part of several neighborhoods, including Gifford Park, Prospect Hill and the Near North Side.
The small city suffered greatly in the economic Panic of 1857; however, the presence of the capital is credited for keeping the town alive. For several years Omaha enjoyed its status as the capitol of the Nebraska Territory, although not without contention. In January, 1858 a group of representatives illegally moved the Nebraska Territorial Legislature to Florence following a violent outburst at the State Capitol in Omaha. After repeatedly being dogged out of voting on the removal of the Capitol from Omaha, a skirmish pitted representatives from Nebraska City, Florence, and other communities to convene outside of Omaha. Despite having a majority of members present for the vote to remove the Capitol and all agreeing, the "Florence Legislature" did not succeed in swaying the Nebraska Territory governor, and the Capitol remained in Omaha until 1867 when Nebraska gained statehood.[9] When Omaha eventually lost the capital to Lincoln in 1867, the city was by then strong enough to maintain economic growth for a period of time.
In 1859 a local newspaper reported that a "...bill introduced in [the Omaha City] Council, for the abolition of slavery in this Territory, was called up yesterday, and its further consideration postponed for two weeks. A strong effort will be made among the Republicans to secure its passage; we think, however, it will fail. The farce certainly cannot be enacted if the Democrats do their duty.[10]
[edit] Business
While Council Bluffs was chosen as the eastern terminus of the United States' first transcontinental railroad in 1862 with the passage of the Pacific Railway Act, construction on the railroad began west from Omaha to avoid the difficulties of constructing a bridge across the Missouri River. This ensured that Omaha would become a major transportation center for the entire country in the years to come.
The Omaha Cable Tramway Company was the first and only cable car company that operated in Omaha. Founded in 1884, it operated cars until 1894.
[edit] 1868 to 1899
Towns founded during this period include Benson, founded 1887, Chalco, founded ?; Dundee, founded 1880; Elkhorn, founded 1865; Papillion, founded 1870; Ralston, founded 1888; South Omaha, founded 1886, and; Millard, which was founded in 1871.
Omaha's growth was accelerated in the 1880s by the rapid development of the Union Stockyards and the meat packing industry in South Omaha. There were several breweries established throughout the city during this period. The "Big 4" Omaha breweries included the Storz, Krug, Willow Springs and Metz breweries.[11]
Culture in Omaha grew extensively during this era. With the increase in population, many social, fraternal and advocacy organizations formed in Omaha in the late 1800s. The city's premier newspapers, the Omaha Bee and the Omaha World-Herald, were founded in 1874 and 1885, respectively. Omaha was the location of the 1892 convention that formed the Populist Party, with its aptly titled Omaha Platform written by "radical farmers" from throughout the Midwest.
In 1876 the trial of Standing Bear v. Crook was held at Fort Omaha. During the trial General Crook testified on behalf of Standing Bear, leading the court to recognize American Indians as persons. This was the first time this occurred in a U.S. Federal Court.[12]
In the 1880s, Omaha was said to be the fastest-growing city in the United States. Thousands of immigrants from central and southern Europe, as well as African Americans migrating from the rural South, came to Omaha to work in the Union Stockyards and slaughterhouses of South Omaha. They created Omaha's original ethnic neighborhoods, with names such as Greek Town, Little Italy, Little Bohemia and Little Poland. Other neighborhoods founded during this period included Bemis Park, Country Club, Dog Hollow and Field Club. The Near North Side also developed greatly during this period, with high concentrations of Jews, African Americans and Germans.
In 1894 the Ladies Axillary of the Ancient Order of Hibernians, a nationalistic Irish-Catholic fraternal organization, was founded in Omaha. That year the city was also the site of the first African American fair held in the United States.[13] The following year the Knights of Ak-Sar-Ben, a civic and philanthropic organization, was founded.
The Trans-Mississippi Exposition was held in North Omaha from June 1 to November 1, 1898. The exposition drew more than 2 million visitors. It required the construction of attractions spanning 100 city blocks, including a shipworthy lagoon, bridges and magnificent (though temporary) buildings constructed of plaster and horsehair. The Exposition also featured a number of sideshows, including Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show and the Everleigh House. Run by Ada and Minna Everleigh, the house continued operating until 1900, when the two women moved to Chicago.
This period also saw the rise of formal crime in Omaha that presaged the arrival of Tom Dennison. The Sporting District was an area in downtown Omaha where many of the city's vice activities happened, including gambling, prostitution and grafting. Anna Wilson was an early madam who got her start in Omaha. She eventually opened a 25-room mansion brothel at Ninth and Douglas Streets. She was the longtime romantic partner of Dan Allen, a well-known and successful riverboat gambler in Omaha. The 1900 kidnaping of Edward Cudahy, Jr. in the Old Gold Coast neighborhood caused a national uproar. The perpetrator, Pat Crowe, became a nationally renowned author and lecturer on criminal justice reforms.
[edit] 1900 to 1941
In the decades before World War II, Omaha went through a prosperous period marked with rapid development, cultural growth and massive growth of population throughout the city. A number of new residents established communities throughout the city, older immigrant populations became further assimilated into the city's culture, and new neighborhoods were built to the north and south of Downtown Omaha. The city also suffered greatly during the Great Depression, and was only relieved through strong federal intervention throughout the 1930s.
[edit] Sports
Omaha University was founded at the Redick Mansion in the Kountze Place neighborhood in 1908, moving to their present campus in 1929. Their football team played on the Saratoga School field until 1952.[14]
The Omaha Omahogs was a baseball team started in 1900 as part of the new Western League. Their name changed to the Omaha Indians in 1902. In 1904 the team was fielded as the Omaha Packers, and in 1906 as the Omaha Rourkes. They kept that name until 1921, when the name changed to the Omaha Buffaloes, which stuck until 1928 when it changed to the Omaha Crickets. In 1930 the team changed its name back to the Omaha Packers, and kept that name until 1935, when they moved to Council Bluffs and subsequently folded. A new team called the Omaha Robin Hoods formed in 1936, but moved to Rock Island, Illinois late in the year. The team reformed shortly thereafter as the Omaha Cardinals, remaining as such for several years.
[edit] Greek Town riot
In 1909 a mob of 1,000 Omahans almost lynched a South Omaha Greek man for being involved with a "white" woman. After their efforts were thwarted, a mob of 2,000 swarmed upon Greek Town in South Omaha, where they destroyed homes, businesses and a school; beat Greek immigrants; and completely destroyed the area by burning it to the ground. No person was ever indicted for a crime related to the incident.
[edit] Easter Sunday Tornado
In 1913 a devastating tornado ripped through Omaha, becoming known as the Easter Sunday tornado. It killed more than 100 people, destroyed hundreds of homes, and struck the heart of North Omaha's African American commercial district, which suffered the most damage. In July of that same year U.S. President Gerald Ford (born Leslie Lynch King, Jr.) was born at 3202 Woolworth Avenue. He spent his first 16 days there, later growing up in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
[edit] Omaha Race Riot
The Omaha Race Riot of 1919 occurred after a black man named Will Brown was arrested and accused of raping a white woman. A mob formed and removed him from the Douglas County Jail, on the top floor of the Douglas County Courthouse . Brown was hanged from the lamppost on the south side of the courthouse, his body was dismembered, burned and dragged through the streets by a crowd of European-born immigrants and European Americans. The mayor attempted to intervene and was hanged himself; he survived only in a last minute rescue by federal agents. The city courthouse was set on fire and seriously damaged. This incident was dramatized by playwright Max Sparber and produced by the Blue Barn Theatre in 1998 at the Douglas County Courthouse, the site of the riot.
[edit] Social and cultural developments
Job's Daughters International, a Masonic youth organization for girls, was founded in Omaha in 1920. Aleph Zadik Aleph, the men's Order of B'nai B'rith Youth Organization, began in Omaha as a college fraternity in Omaha in 1923.
In 1925 Malcolm X was born (as Malcolm Little) at 3446 Pinkney Street in North Omaha. His family moved to Milwaukee, Wisconsin when he was a year old after threats on their lives from the Ku Klux Klan.
The Nebraska chapter of the German-American National Alliance (GANA) was founded and led in Omaha by Valentin J. Peter, the publisher and editor of the German language Omaha Tribune in 1907. By the 1920s the organization was working closely with breweries throughout Omaha to challenge the complete political and social assimilation of German immigrants in Nebraska. During the same period Peter was buying other German language newspapers across the U.S. The GANA folded in the late 1920s; Peter's business, the Interstate Publishing Company]], still operates in Omaha today.
[edit] Tom Dennison
The reign of Omaha political boss Tom Dennison ended in 1933. For more than thirty-five years he controlled gambling, drinking, prostitution and other criminal interests throughout Omaha, particularly in his seedy Sporting District. He controlled bootlegging operations in Little Italy through the Prohibition Era, as well as the performance of James Dahlman, Omaha's only eight-term mayor. Dennison was also implicated in unrest related to the Omaha Race Riot in 1919.
[edit] World War II
In 1945 the Enola Gay and Bockscar were two of 536 B-29 Superfortresses manufactured at the Glenn L. Martin Aircraft Factory (now Offutt Air Force Base) in suburban Bellevue near the end of World War II.
That same year a Japanese fire balloon exploded over Dundee. The incident was part of a large World War II campaign by the Japanese military to cause mass chaos in American cities. However, the story was suppressed by the American military until after the war was over. Nobody was hurt in the explosion.[15] [16]
[edit] Civil Rights Movement
Civil rights activism in Omaha began in 1912 with the formation of a local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. It continued through the coming years under the influence of local leaders Whitney Young, George Wells Parker and Harry Haywood, as well as the Citizens Civic Committee for Civil Liberties (4CL), Creighton University's DePorres Club, and the student-led Black Association for Nationalism Through Unity (BANTU). Mainstream organizations including the Urban League of Nebraska also supported the movement. Their successes led to the end of redlining and discriminatory neighborhood covenants, as well as the implementation of a school integration plan.
[edit] 1950 to 1999
In 1950, the NCAA moved the College World Series (CWS) to Rosenblatt Stadium, (then known as Omaha Municipal Stadium). Started in 1947, the tournment was held at Kalamazoo, Michigan in 1947 and 1948, and Wichita, Kansas in 1949. Since 1950 the series has been held annually at the Rosenblatt, despite bids from several cities to move the CWS to another venue.
More than 6,000,000 fans have attended CWS games in Omaha. The City of Omaha has regularly expanded and renovated the stadium to accommodate fans, teams, and media covering the event. ESPN televised every game of the event from 1980 through 1987. ESPN started coverage again when the championship series went to a best-of-3 format in 2003. From 1988 through 2002, CBS televised the championship game: a winner-take-all single game.
In 1955 the Omaha Cardinals joined the AAA American Association, and thrived until the late 1950s. That team folded in 1959. In 1961-62 the Omaha Dodgers were the farm team for the L.A. Dodgers. After the city went six years without a professional team, the Omaha Royals started in 1969. They have continued since.
By the 1960s, the Omaha Stockyards had become the world's largest livestock processing center. They surpassed Chicago's Union Stock Yards in the late 1950s. As improved truck and boxcar refrigeration capabilities encouraged the slaughtering process to move closer to feedlots, all centralized stockyard activity declined and the Omaha Stockyards were closed in 1999.
Weather was severe in 1975. In January, the city was paralyzed by a devastating blizzard that dumped several feet of snow on the city. In May the city was hit by a tornado. The Omaha Tornado of 1975 was a F4 tornado that ripped through neighborhoods along 72nd Street on May 6, 1975, killing 3 and injuring 133. In terms of damage, it was the most costly tornado in American history to that date, with damage estimates between $250 million and $500 million.
In 1988 Omaha demolished a downtown district of brick warehouses called "Jobbers Canyon", listed in the National Register of Historic Places. The delisting and demolition of Jobbers Canyon made way for the campus headquarters of ConAgra Foods and the city's Heartland of America Park. The loss of the buildings also galvanized citizens to pay more attention to the historic fabric of the city.
[edit] 2000 to present
On August 20, 2001, Nebraska Methodist Health Systems demolished the Indian Hills Theater, a "super-Cinerama" movie theater containing the largest indoor screen of its type in the world. The location of the Indian Hills Theater now serves as a parking lot.
The downtown area has experienced a resurgence in the late 1990s and early 2000s, with several billion dollars of new construction. The new developments include the Qwest Center Omaha arena/convention center complex, the Holland Performing Arts Center, the Gallup University campus, The River City Star riverboat landing, National Park Service Midwest Region headquarters, new high-rise headquarters towers for First National Bank of Omaha and Union Pacific Railroad and hundreds of condominium units. The First National Bank of Omaha tower is the tallest building between Denver and Minneapolis, including its direct rival to the south, Kansas City, passing its tallest by 1ft.
[edit] Historic landmarks
- Further information: Landmarks in North Omaha, Nebraska
Omaha has numerous historic landmarks that date from before the city's founding. The site of Fort Lisa and Cabanne's Trading Post, both located in the city's far northside, were first occupied in the early 1800s. Landmarks from the mid-1800s include Culter's Park, or "Winter Quarters" located in Florence, and Fontenelle's Post located south of the city. Downtown is the location of historical plaques marking the first building in Omaha and the first burial, and historical landmarks in North Omaha number in the dozens, including the former town of Saratoga. South Omaha, Dundee and Benson also have numerous historical landmarks. Kountze Park was the site of the 1898 Trans-Mississippi Exposition.
[edit] Former landmarks
The Old Post Office was built in 1898 and destroyed in 1966. The demolition of this building, along with the Old City Hall, was highly controversial because of the historical significance of the building, and touched off the landmarks preservation movement in the city. Jobber's Canyon, also located downtown, was a large industrial and warehouse area comprising 24 buildings. In 1989 another controversial demolition occurred taking all 24 buildings down. This represented the largest loss of a historic district on the National Register of Historic Places to date. The Hotel Fontenelle was an upscale hotel downtown that was built in 1913. After sitting vacant for almost twenty years the building was torn down in 1983.
In 1938 the federal government built the Logan Fontenelle Housing Project to aid poor and low-income families. After years of neglect the buildings were torn down in 1995. The house Malcolm X was born in, also located in North Omaha, was torn down in 1965.
The Ak-Sar-Ben horse racing track was built in 1920, and the arena was constructed in 1929. Horse racing ended there in 1995. Everything on the site, including buildings and the grandstands, was demolished by 2005. The Omaha Stockyards were established in 1883, becoming the world's largest stockyards by the 1950s. After being closed in 1999 the site was completely demolished except for the Livestock Exchange Building.
The Metz Brewery brewery was among the first in the Nebraska Territory, opening in 1856. Its facility lasted in Downtown Omaha until 1920, when Nebraska's Prohibition laws forced the company to fold. Willow Springs Distilling Company began brewing in the 1860s, and built a major facility near Downtown Omaha in the 1880s. That building was demolished in the 1970s. The company that became the Storz Brewery was founded in Omaha in 1863. Storz eventually built a major brewery along 16th Street in East Omaha with 15 buildings. The majority of them were demolished by the 1990s, with only a few standing still today. In 1894 the Krug Brewery in South Omaha built a brewery that was eventually bought by Falstaff. It was completely demolished by 1996. Frederick Krug, the founder of the brewery, started Krug Park in Benson to advertise and sell his label. That facility was closed in 1940, 10 years after the worst roller coaster accident in American history up to that year.
Perhaps the most recent loss to the city's historic landmarks is the Indian Hills Theater, built in 1962 and demolished in 2001. The theater featured the largest Cinerama screen in the United States, and was replaced by a parking lot for a local hospital.
[edit] Historic neighborhoods of Omaha
Historic neighborhoods in Omaha alphabetical order | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Founded | Location | Notes | ||
Bemis Park | North of Cuming between North 34th and Lincoln Boulevard | An upscale development designed to offer local doctors and teachers a nice place to live. | |||
Benson | 1887 | North-central Omaha near 60th and Maple Streets | Home to Krug Park from 1900 to 1930s, which was the location of the nation's worst roller coaster disaster. | ||
Boys Town | 1917 | Near 132nd and Dodge Streets | This incorporated village is the famous institution which originally bore the same name. | ||
Brown Park | The neighborhood was once home to much of Omaha's Mexican and Czech communities.[17][18] | ||||
Casey's Row | A small neighborhood of Black porters who worked for the local railroads.[19] | ||||
Chinatown | 1910s | Formerly situated in the vicinity of 12th and Douglas Streets. | Centering on the On Leong Tong based at 111 North 12th, another institution was King Fong's Cantonese at 315 South 16th Street that was opened in 1921 by Gin Ah Chin with elaborate furnishings imported from Hong Kong. | ||
Country Club | 1925 | 50th to 56th Streets, from Corby to Seward Streets | Added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2004.[20] | ||
Dog Hollow | |||||
Dundee | 1880 | Near 50th and Dodge Streets. | Annexed by Omaha in 1915, which was fought until 1917. | ||
East Omaha | 1854 | East of Florence Boulevard, north of Locust Street, south and west of the Missouri River. | The first annexation to the city in 1854 and home to Omaha's Carter Lake Park. | ||
Field Club | |||||
Florence | 1846 | The original Winter Quarters predates the city of Omaha. A Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints temple is now located at Winter Quarters. | |||
Gold Coast | |||||
Old Gold Coast | |||||
Gophertown | Before the city of Omaha extended north beyond Lake Street, mostly Irish settlers inhabited an area known as Gophertown, located north of Saratoga and south of Florence.[21] | ||||
Greek Town | Located in the heart of South Omaha. | ||||
Kountze Place | 1883 | A suburban development for affluent business owners from the city; once reachable only via streetcar. | |||
Little Bohemia | The location of many Czech immigrants in Omaha in the late 1800s and early 1900s. | ||||
Little Italy | Located next to Little Bohemia. | ||||
Little Poland | |||||
Midtown | |||||
Miller Park | 1899 | Developed around the turn of the century after losing the opportunity to host the 1898 Trans-Mississippi Exposition. | |||
Minne Lusa | 1916 | Located south of the Minne Lusa Water Works. | |||
Morton Meadows | |||||
Near North Side | Cuming Street on the south, Locust Street on the north, 14th Avenue on the east and the North Freeway on the west. | Located immediately north of downtown. It was once a deeply integrated community, with ethnic, racial and socioeconomic mixing. From approximately 1920 through the 1950s, it boasted a booming African American cultural scene. | |||
North Omaha | A racially-diverse area north of downtown Omaha with a rich historical social, cultural, economic, architectural, and religious legacy. | ||||
Old Market | A district in downtown Omaha that historically housed Omaha's fresh food vendors and warehousing district. | ||||
Saratoga | 1856 | A school, library, and homes once occupied this boom and bust town. | |||
Sheelytown | |||||
South Omaha | Formerly a separate city, it was annexed into Omaha in 1915. | ||||
S. 24th Street | |||||
Scriptown | An area of lots given away to Nebraska Territory legislators who consistently voted to keep Omaha the capital.[22] | ||||
Sporting District | Tom Dennison used to operate his prostitution, gambling and bootlegging operations. | ||||
Squatter's Row | An area between North 11th and North 13th Streets, from Nicholas to Locust Streets, behind the Storz Brewery. For more than 75 years this area was inhabited solely by squatters.[23] |
[edit] See also
- List of Registered Historic Places in Nebraska#Douglas County
- Founding figures of Omaha, Nebraska
- History of North Omaha, Nebraska
- Timeline of North Omaha, Nebraska history
- Notable natives of Omaha, Nebraska
- Timeline of Racial Tension in Omaha, Nebraska
- Civil Rights Movement in Omaha, Nebraska
- Racial Tension in Omaha, Nebraska
- Douglas County Historical Society
- History of Omaha (category)
- Historic houses in Omaha (category)
- Registered Historic Places in Omaha (category)
- Historic districts in Omaha (category)
- Landmarks in Omaha, Nebraska (category)
[edit] References
- ^ Matthews, J.J. (1961) The Osages: Children of the Middle Waters. University of Oklahoma Press. Pages 110, 128, 140, 282
- ^ (2007) "History at a glance", Douglas County Historical Society. Retrieved 2/2/08.
- ^ (2007) "History at a glance", Douglas County Historical Society. Retrieved 2/2/08.
- ^ Gilman, D.C., Peck, H.T. and Colby, F.M. () The New International Encyclopædia. p 348.
- ^ Federal Writers' Project Staff (1939) Nebraska: A guide to the Cornhusker state. Federal Writers' Project of the Works Progress Administration for the State of Nebraska. p. 222.
- ^ (n.d.) Multiethnic Guide. Greater Omaha Economic Partnership.
- ^ Reeves, R. (n.d.) Douglas County History University of Nebraska.
- ^ Douglas County. Andreas' history of Nebraska. Retrieved 8/11/07.
- ^ Bristow, D. (1997) A Dirty, Wicked Town: Tale of 19th Century Omaha. Caxton Press.
- ^ A Daily Nebraskian newspaper editorial from 1859, as quoted in Bristow, D. (2002) A Dirty, Wicked Town: Tale of 19th Century Omaha. Caxton Press.
- ^ Larsen, L.C. and Cotrell, B.J. (1997) The Gate City: A History of Omaha. University of Nebraska Press. p 144.
- ^ Bristow, D. (2002)
- ^ Nebraska Writers Project (1938) Negros in Nebraska Workers Progress Administration.
- ^ (1993) A History of UNO. University of Nebraska at Omaha. Retrieved 5/29/07.
- ^ (2004) "Omaha Was Bombed During WWII: Keeping Secret Was Some People's Effort To Help War," KETV.com. 7/14/07. Retrieved 7/7/07.
- ^ (nd) Dundee Bombing. HistoricOmaha.com. Retrieved 7/7/07.
- ^ Thiele, S., Jordan, T.E., Lopez, D.A., et al. (2001) The Latino Experience in Omaha. E. Mellen Press. p 14.
- ^ "Sokol South Omaha Local History Project Collection", Nebraska State Historical Society. Retrieved 5/10/08.
- ^ Federal Writers Project. (1939) Nebraska: A guide to the Cornhusker state. Nebraska State Historical Society. p 243.
- ^ National Register of Historic Places in Douglas County, Nebraska. Retrieved 5/20/07.
- ^ Barstow, D. (2002) A Dirty Town. Caxton Press. p 44.
- ^ Roenfeld, R. (nd) Sam Bayliss on Broadway. The Historical Society of Pottawattamie County, Iowa. Retrieved 6/7/07.
- ^ Federal Writers Project. (1939) Nebraska: A guide to the Cornhusker state. Nebraska State Historical Society. p 243.
[edit] External links
- Historic photos
- Early Omaha photos
- Andreas' History of Nebraska
- "Douglas County Historical Society"
- Early History of Omaha by former mayor Alfred Sorenson.
- "Early Omaha: Gateway to the West" by the Omaha Public Library.
- Ford Conservation Center of the Nebraska State Historical Society.
- Historic Florence Society website.
- Mardos Memorial Library featuring Douglas County history.
- Old Nebraska News.
- "Project OMAHA" at Omaha South High School.
- Sarpy County Historical Museum website.
- Nebraska State Historical Society website.
- "USA StatesDates" - Important dates in Nebraska history.
|