With early 20th century growth in the number of African-American migrants recruited by the meatpacking industry, the population doubled from 1910 to 1920. Some groups in the city resisted such changes. Some public places discriminated against African Americans, although segregation was not legal. Up to the 1940s and 1950s, many of the city's restaurants were effectively segregated, with signs that stated, "We Don't Serve Any Colored Race." An early organized effort for civil rights in Omaha was the creation of the local chapter of the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in 1912, Episcopal minister, Father
John Albert Williams playing the role of first president. At the national level, leadership and membership were integrated. The chapter has continued. Other civil rights organizations soon formed in Omaha, part of the early 20th century spirit of reform that generated many progressive groups. In 1917,
George Wells Parker founded the
Hamitic League of the World in Omaha. In 1918 the League published his pamphlet
Children of the Sun. The Hamitic League was committed to Black
nationalism. Based in New York, Cyril Briggs became editor of their journal,
The Crusader. It later became the journal of the
African Blood Brotherhood (ABB). In the 1920s, the Baptist minister Earl Little founded the Omaha chapter of
Marcus Garvey's Universal Negro Improvement Association. Little was the father of Malcolm, who later named himself
Malcolm X when he became a Black Muslim minister and spokesman for the Nation of Islam. Malcolm X was
born in Omaha in 1925, but his family moved away from the city while he was young. There are reports of
African Blood Brotherhood-related action in Omaha, particularly around the time of the
Willy Brown lynching. Witnessing the mob rule that overtook the city at the time of the lynching horrified many people. One of those who was radicalized was
Harry Haywood, who went on to become involved with the African Blood Brotherhood. Later Haywood became a leading African-American member of the
Communist Party of the United States. He was active from the 1920s to his death in 1981. In 1927, the first chapter in the
American West of the
Urban League was founded in Omaha. The chapter was organized at a meeting of white and Black citizens at the Y.M.C.A. and its purpose was "the social and economic betterment of Negro residents and improved relationship between races." The Omaha Urban League (now the Urban League of Nebraska) has been led by many prominent African Americans, including
Whitney M. Young Jr. and Thomas H. Warren Sr. Young quickly tripled the membership of the chapter during his tenure in the 1950s and would eventually lead the National Urban League during the civil rights movement. Warren previously served as the first African-American chief of police for the City of Omaha. The Urban League of Nebraska continues today. During this period, the
National Federation of Colored Women had five chapters in North Omaha with more than 750 members. They actively conducted a variety of social, political and charitable work throughout the city of Omaha. Starting in 1920, the Colored Commercial Club organized to help Blacks in Omaha secure employment and to encourage business enterprises among African Americans. The
South Omaha Stockyards employed a large portion of the city's African-American workers from the South. Working conditions there were often brutal. These workers made significant gains after organizing with the
Industrial Workers of the World in the 1920s. During the Depression of the 1930s, however, they suffered setbacks when major
packinghouses closed. In the 1930s, a clandestine group called the
Knights and Daughters of Tabor was founded in Omaha. Also known as the "
Knights of Liberty", it was a secret African-American organization whose goal was "nothing less than the destruction of slavery." In 1938,
Mildred Brown founded The
Omaha Star. Starting with a circulation of 6,000, it quickly became the city's only African-American newspaper, featuring positive news, role models and activities throughout the community. The paper strongly supported the local civil rights movement, for which it often featured successes and highlighted the challenges facing Blacks in Omaha. The
Star reported proudly on the career of Captain Alfonza W. Davis, who fought with the
Tuskegee Airmen during
World War II. He was presumed
Killed In Action when his aircraft disappeared over Germany in 1944.
Political representation Matthew Oliver Ricketts, elected from Omaha in 1892, was Nebraska's first African-American state legislator, but no other Black state legislator was elected until 1926. In August 1906, Black members of the Omaha community formed a group called the "Progressive League of Douglas County", Williams president, to pressure the county Republicans to include Blacks on the legislative ticket, in particular
Millard F. Singleton. Eventually, North Omaha sent a succession of African Americans to the State Legislature between the 1920s and WWII, starting with
John Andrew Singleton and
Ferdinand L. Barnett in 1926, Dr.
Aaron Manasses McMillan (elected in 1928) and followed by
Johnny Owen. In the first Unicameral in 1937
John Adams Jr was elected (he served from 1935 to 1941) and was followed by his father,
John Adams Sr, (served from 1949 until his death in 1962). Adams Sr was a noted minister of the
African Methodist Episcopal Church. John A Singleton, John Adams Jr, John O. Wood, Andrew Stuart, and Harry Anderson formed the Consolidated Negro Political Organization in March 1933 in an effort to organize Black political activity in Omaha. Adams Jr was a lawyer who frequently was involved in Civil Rights cases and, as a legislator, introduced the state's first public housing law and supported other welfare legislation. == 1947–1962 ==