Omaha Star building

The Omaha Star building is located at 2216 North 24th Street in North Omaha, Nebraska. As the site of publication of the Omaha Star since 1938, the building is notable for its long service to Omaha's African-American community and its connections to the civil rights movement in the city. In recognition of its significance, the building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2007.

Omaha Star building
The Omaha Star building
LocationNorth Omaha, Nebraska
Coordinates41°16′47″N 95°56′49″W
Built1923
ArchitectG.P. Prinz
Architectural styleEarly Commercial
NRHP reference No.07001322 [1]
Added to NRHPDecember 27, 2007

History

Through the Great Migration decades, the Near North Side of Omaha was the center of the city's African-American community when Mildred Brown and her husband Edward S. Gilbert founded the Omaha Star in 1938. The building, built in 1923, originally housed a mortuary and then a social hall. Brown lived in an apartment at the back of the building from the founding of the paper through 1989 when she died. (She and her husband divorced in the 1940s.)[2]

Since 1945, the Omaha Star has been the only African-American paper in Omaha. In the 1940s, the building provided a home for the DePorres Club, an important civil rights organization in Omaha. Brown invited the DePorres Club, a youth-led activism organization, to use her offices after the group was exiled from nearby Creighton University.[3][4]

Brown ensured that the Omaha Star kept the community apprised of national issues, especially the civil rights movement's successes and failures across the country and throughout the city. Journalists researched the issues and presented the facts to its readers, and then urged involvement, but it also provided a voice and a face for the community in general.[5]

The city of Omaha recently unanimously approved a community development block grant to fund a $40,000 renovation for the building.[6] During the renovation, the building's hallmark 1940s sign was temporarily taken down for refurbishing. The sign features the newspaper's name, a map of Africa and a large star that lights up at night.[7]

Marguerita Washington, Mildred Brown's niece, has run the paper since her aunt's death. She owns the building. Speaking of the NRHP designation, she said, "I wanted it in recognition for my aunt because of all that hard work she did in the community."[6]

The city dedicated the Mildred Brown Memorial Strolling Park in May 2008 next to the Omaha Star Building. Constructed as a service learning project by students from the Metropolitan Community College, the park includes walkways and planting beds.[8]

gollark: But if they use *money* they can happily just go "ah yes, thank you HoneyFoodsCorp for the cash money™, we can now buy wood".
gollark: Do they just need to negotiate with a wood supplier who needs food or something? This leads to increasingly convoluted and problematic chains.
gollark: How is HoneyFoodsCompany meant to get stuff from BeesCorp?
gollark: Imagine you have BeesCorp, which produces honey and requires wood for beehives, and HoneyFoodsCompany, which requires honey and other stuff and produces food.
gollark: Which isn't always true, or even the case a lot of the time.

See also

References

  1. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
  2. "Three Nebraska Women: Mildred Brown" Archived 2011-07-27 at the Wayback Machine, Nebraska Educational Television. Retrieved 5/24/08.
  3. "" Archived 2008-05-28 at the Wayback Machine Winter: The magazine of Creighton University. 12;2. Winter 1995-96. p 5.
  4. (1992) A Street of Dreams, Nebraska ETV Network (video).
  5. "Historic buildings considered 9-21-07 in Omaha for listing in National Register of Historic Places", Nebraska State Historical Society. Retrieved 5/23/08.
  6. Bradley, Q. (2008) "North Omaha building gets national recognition", Omaha World-Herald. January 13, 2008. Retrieved 5/23/08.
  7. Keenan, J. (2008) "Local businesses known for their signs", Omaha World-Herald, January 30, 2008. Retrieved 5/23/08.
  8. "Mildred Brown Honored as a Nebraska Journalism Pioneer", KETV.com. May 15, 2008. Retrieved 5/24/08.
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