In 1853, Edmond Jefferies filed a claim on of land in what was known as East Omaha. This area was Omaha's first annexation, joining the city in 1854. The company initially owned , rapidly increasing through further acquisition. In 1903 the East Omaha Land Company advertised East Omaha as "the manufacturing center of Omaha". Before the creation of Carter Lake, Iowa, the East Omaha community wrapped around a
meander on the west bank of the Missouri River. In 1877, flooding caused the river to jump its banks and shortened the main stream. The meander became an
oxbow lake, and residents on both sides of the river now found themselves on the right bank, attached to
Nebraska. The area was home to "East Omaha Island", the "Florence Lake", and a number of
icehouses on Carter Lake, which was then called Cut-Off Lake. East Omaha once included all of Carter Lake, Iowa. Due to a
flood that occurred in March 1877, the course of the Missouri River was redirected 1.25 mi (2 km) to the southeast. The remnants of the old river course became an
oxbow-shaped lake, for which the Iowa town is named. After the river jumped its banks, a lengthy court case ensued. The
Supreme Court of the United States held that the sudden change in the river's course did not change the original boundary. They ruled that the community to become known as Carter Lake was still part of Iowa. (
Nebraska v. Iowa, 143 U.S. 359 (1892)). The Court delayed a final decree to allow Nebraska and Iowa to reach an agreement consistent with its holding, which they did. (145 U.S. 519 (1892)). Now, all roads into Carter Lake run through
East Omaha and downtown Omaha. The largest single real estate deal in Nebraska up to 1890 is said to have occurred there. That year an unknown property in East Omaha was sold to the Omaha Bridge and Terminal company, a subsidiary of the Illinois Central, for nearly $700,000. The south end of East Omaha was home to the Union Pacific Rail Yards, with one former
hobo reporting that he tricked a
railroad cop, also called "railroad dicks", with his clothing, :""I even talked to a known bad dick in the yards in East Omaha, and he treated me like a brother while at the same time he was looking around for a hobo to arrest for trespassing on railroad property. I thought to myself, Good old clothes, a little deception is a wonderful thing." East Omaha, east of Carter Lake, was the preferred site for the
Trans-Mississippi and International Exposition of 1897. The area considered was between Carter Lake on the south and Florence Lake on the north, which is now where Beechwood Trailer Courts are now located. Florence Lake Hotel was once on this site. A period newspaper account reported that, :"It has about available... offers level ground... is dotted with trees... plentiful water supply. It is less than form the Downtown Post Office. A paved street (16th) already extends almost to the site and a new bridge across the Missouri River makes accessible from Iowa." However, the East Omaha site ended up losing out to a site in
North Omaha. At the turn of the 20th century the area was home to numerous businesses important to Omaha's growth, with early examples including a hominy mill and a plaster mill. The Carter White Lead Company built a large scale plant in East Omaha. On its north edge, East Omaha was home to the Beechwood community. In 1948 the Beechwood School District joined
Omaha Public Schools, almost eliminating all traces of the Beechwood community. However, the community is still noted on maps.
History timeline The following items have been documented by a local historian. • Pre-1853—
Omaha nation occupied area • 1853— First European-American claimed placed on East Omaha • 1854— East Omaha first annexed by the
City of Omaha • 1877— Flood created the oxbow lake to become known as Carter Lake • 1887— The East Omaha Land Company was established and the area comprising East Omaha was cleared for sale • 1887— The East Omaha Factory District was cleared for development. • 1887— Sherman School opened as a two-room schoolhouse • 1889— Pershing School opened as a one-room schoolhouse without a name • 1890— Most expensive Nebraska land deal to date occurred in East Omaha • 1890— The new
Levi Carter White Lead Company opened in the East Omaha Factory District • 1892— Omaha lost
Carter Lake-area to Iowa in U.S. Supreme Court case • 1893— Illinois Railroad
East Omaha Bridge first opened • 1897— East Omaha considered for
Trans-Mississippi and International Exposition, not selected • 1908—
Edward and Selena Carter Cornish donated 260-acres to the City of Omaha to form the
Levi Carter Park. • 1913—
Easter Sunday tornado obliterated East Omaha • 1921— The Carter White Lead Company factory in East Omaha was permanently closed • 1920s— Carter Lake secedes from Council Bluffs and wants to re-join East Omaha; Omaha denies the offer • 1925— The Omaha Municipal Airport opened; eventually renamed
Eppley Airfield • 1926— The new brick eight-room Pershing School opened • 1930—
Carter Lake, Iowa incorporated • 1947— Floods destroy many homes in the area • 1947— East Omaha District 61 was absorbed into the Omaha Public School District and in January 1948 the Pershing School became an Omaha school. • 1948— The single school of the Beechwood School District 62 merged with Omaha Public Schools, closed permanently and students were sent to Pershing School • 1952— East Omaha was evacuated as a major flood brought 16-mile-wide waters to the area. President
Harry S. Truman visited • 1956— East Omaha was annexed into Omaha again • 1967— Major flooding hit East Omaha again • 1976— Pershing School was permanently closed and students were sent to Sherman. The building was demolished soon after • 1980— Illinois Railroad East Omaha bridge was closed to traffic • 1984— Major flooding hit East Omaha • 1990— Major flooding hit East Omaha • 1993— Major flooding hit East Omaha • 2024— All residential houses except one are gone from East Omaha. Today there are incarceration facilities, homeless shelters, rental car facilities, and light industry in the area. ==Economy==