In 1947, a student-led civil-rights group called the
DePorres Club was forced off the
Creighton University campus, where they started.
Mildred Brown, a community activist and publisher, invited them to meet at the
Omaha Star, the paper she directed for the African-American community for decades. Omaha jazz legend
Preston Love reported that in the 1950s he saw signs in Omaha restaurants and bars that said, "We Don't Serve Any Colored Race", but that he was always welcome as a musician. In the 1950s, the United Meatpacking Workers of America (UPWA) helped use their power to have businesses in Omaha integrate their facilities. The late 1950s and early 1960s was the period which
Lois Mark Stalvey wrote about in
The Education of a WASP. She recounted her
activist efforts to desegregate a middle-class
West Omaha neighborhood for an African-American surgeon and his family who wanted to live in the area. Such efforts took place in a different environment from the struggles of most working-class families in North and South Omaha. In 1955, the
State of Nebraska took Omaha's main amusement park,
Peony Park, to district court. The state believed that the park, founded in 1919, violated Nebraska Civil Rights Law when
African American swimmers at the
Amateur Athletic Union Swimming Meet held at the park on August 27, 1955 were discriminated against. In
State of Nebraska v. Peony Park, the
Nebraska Supreme Court found that two African-American participants were illegally barred from the meet because Peony Park barred them from the pool. On September 7, 1955, the court fined Peony Park $50 and costs of the trial. Additional civil suits were settled out of court. The
Omaha Star newspaper reported extensively on the trial, using the opportunity to highlight segregationist policies around the city as well as the city's burgeoning civil rights movement. By the early 1960s, economic progress by many African Americans and ethnic Americans became unraveled in the massive job losses caused by restructuring of railroad and meatpacking industries. By the mid-1960s,
North Omaha had much more poverty than before and increasing social problems. On July 4, 1966, tensions broke out in a riot after a day of blistering 103 degree weather. Refusing a police order to disperse, African Americans demolished police cars and attacked the North 24th Street business corridor, throwing firebombs and demolishing storefronts. Businesses in the Near North Side suffered millions of dollars in damages. The riot lasted three days. The
National Guard was called in to disperse the rioters. Less than a month later, on August 1, 1966, riots erupted after a 19-year-old was shot by a white off-duty policeman during a burglary. rioters firebombed three buildings and 180
riot police were required to quell the crowds. Leaders in the community criticized the
Omaha World-Herald and local television stations for blaming African Americans for the conditions they faced in their deteriorating neighborhoods, when the problems of joblessness and decreased maintenance were beyond city and regional control. That same year, 1966,
A Time for Burning, a documentary featuring North Omaha and the social problems, was filmed. Later, it was nominated for an
Oscar for best documentary. In March 1968, a crowd of high school and university students gathered at the
Omaha Civic Auditorium to protest the presidential campaign of
George Wallace, the segregationist governor of
Alabama. After counter-protesters began acting violently toward the
activists,
police brutality led to dozens of protesters being injured. During the melee, an African-American youth was shot and killed by a police officer. Students' fleeing the outbreak attacked businesses and cars, causing thousands of dollars of damage. The following day a local barber named
Ernie Chambers helped calm a disturbance and prevent a riot by students at Horace Mann Junior High School. Chambers was already recognized as a community leader. After finishing his law degree, Chambers was elected to the
Nebraska State Legislature. He went on to serve a total of 38 years, longer than any of his predecessors. Events went on for several more days. This is the last noted riot in Omaha. In 1970, an African-American man named Duane Peak was arrested, and quickly implicated six others in a bombing at a vacant house in North Omaha that killed a police officer. On August 31, local
Black Panther Party leaders David Rice and Ed Poindexter were arrested in the case, despite not having been originally implicated. In 1971, both men were convicted of murder in the controversial
Rice/Poindexter Case, and in 1974 a retrial of Rice and Poindexter was denied by the Nebraska State Supreme Court.
Late 20th century The 1970s construction of the
North Freeway bisected North Omaha, effectively cutting the African-American community in half and creating social problems. In 1976, the
Omaha Public Schools began court-ordered busing to achieve integration. In 1981, arsonists burned an
East Omaha duplex after an African-American family signed a rental agreement there. The arson is unsolved. In 1993, the Nebraska Parole Board voted for the first time to unanimously commute the sentences of Rice and Poindexter to
time served. The Nebraska Board of Pardons refused to schedule a hearing in the matter. This same sequence of events has occurred no fewer than three times since then, with the same outcome each time. In 1995, an African-American gang member murdered an Omaha police officer named Jimmy Wilson, Jr. The city responded by equipping every police car with a camera and giving North Omaha officers body armor. Later that year, arsonists tipped over and burned an African-American woman's car in
East Omaha near the site of the 1981 arson. Both cases are unsolved. That same year, the
Omaha World-Herald reported that, "One resident of Rose Garden Estates near 172nd and Pacific Streets said privately, for instance, that he finds the prospect of being incorporated into the city 'increasingly scary.' 'I left
Benson because I didn't like the changes,' he said. 'Too much crime, too much racial tension, too much school busing. I went to the suburbs to get away from that, and now I'm being forced back in.' The man, an insurance company employee, denied that his problems were based on race, but he asked that this part of the interview be anonymous." In 1997, an African-American
Gulf War veteran named Marvin Ammons was shot and killed by an Omaha police officer. A
grand jury indicts the officer for manslaughter, then the judgment was thrown out for jury misconduct. A second grand jury
acquitted the officer of wrongdoing and admonished the Omaha Police Department for mishandling the case. Cornerstone Memorial at the NW corner of 24th & Lake St in
North Omaha. In 2000, George Bibins, an African American who leads Omaha police on a high speed chase, is shot and killed by officer
Jared Kruse at the end of the chase. Charges are filed against the officer, but special prosecutors force them to be presented to a grand jury which declines to recommend charges. The
Omaha Police Department does not make a decision on the use of force because
Jared Kruse refused to be questioned and is allowed to retire a year later for PTSD. A second jury in the civil case refuses to award damages to Bibins' family. That year, the
Nebraska State Legislature enacted
term limits. Some used this action to target long-time State Senator
Ernie Chambers, an African American who had then served 27 years representing North Omaha. In 2005, Chambers became the longest-serving State Senator in Nebraska history, with more than 32 years of service. Because of the 2002 law, Chambers was not allowed to immediately run for reelection when his term expired in 2009, so he waited until 2013 and ran again. He was reelected consistently until term limits again prevented him from running again in 2021. In total, Ernie Chambers represented North Omaha in the Legislature for 46 years.
Desegregation busing and
racial integration in public schools were contentious issues in Omaha. Problems with public schools were a factor in middle-class people moving to the suburbs, but the shift in population to suburbs also followed the growth of the city and highways. Omahans' preference for larger, newer housing was just like that of other Americans. Middle-class African Americans have also moved to the suburbs here and in other cities.
Schooling From 1976 to 1999, Omaha had a
busing plan as an effort to integrate the schools. When the city considered ending busing in the 1990s, Concerned and Caring Educators, a 100-member group of black education administrators and supervisors, praised the system as having improved race relations and the education of Omaha's students.
Omaha Public Schools ended busing to achieve integration in 1999. It responded to parental desires for neighborhood schools and for choice. It has created magnet schools to attract students from middle-class families. As in many other cities, concerns about schools are high. Like some other districts such as
Louisville, Kentucky, Omaha has begun to explore socioeconomic integration - assigning students according to family income - to change the makeup of their schools and address low test scores among poor children in the inner city. There have been delays in efforts to unite the Omaha public school district with newly annexed smaller, local districts in the western half of the city. ==21st century==