In 1893
George F. Franklin started publishing
The Enterprise, later published by Thomas P. Mahammitt. For Easter, 1896, Mahammitt's
Enterprise released a special edition which was widely commended and whose contributors included Ella L. Mahammitt, Mrs. E. E. Guy, J. A. Childs,
Josephine Sloan Yates, Mrs. E. Turner,
Comfort Baker,
Victoria Earle Matthews, and
Margaret James Murray (wife of
Booker T. Washington).
The Enterprise was owned by Thomas and operated by his wife, Ella, with Mrs. Al. Robinson the typographer, and was Omaha's leading black paper in the 1890s and 1900s. Its success allowed it to increase in size from a seven-column folio to a six-column quatro in 1901. Mahammitt was on the executive committee of the Western Negro Press Association along with chairman W. W. Taylor and with H. R. Pinkney, Col. F. L. Jeltz, Nick Chiles, and W. H. Duncan and of the National Afro-American Press Association in 1905. Mahammitt was involved in civic affairs as well. In 1896, he was on the executive board of the Colored Men's Working Republican Club, and in 1897 he served as treasurer for the local board for the Negro Department of the
Tennessee Centennial. He had a good relationship with Omaha's political elite, and in 1900 he became Omaha Inspector of Weights and Measures. Mahammitt was noted for his strict enforcement and made his office self-supporting, inspecting fees paying his salary. In the early 1900s, Mahammitt and his wife were drawn into conflict with anti-Booker T. Washington black newspapers, such as Chicago's
The Broad Ax and Topeka's Plaindealer. Much of the antipathy towards Mahammitt stemmed from his relationship with Omaha Mayor Moores, who appointed him inspector of weights and measures at a salary of about $1,600. Mahammitt's renewal appointment was initially rejected in 1903, but Mahammitt was eventually confirmed. In 1908, together with Nick Chiles of the Topeka Plaindealer and J. W. Jackson, Mahammitt visited President
Theodore Roosevelt as the guest of
William Tecumseh Vernon. After this visit, Mahammitt endorsed the secretary of war
William Howard Taft, which increased the spats between his and other papers. Mahammitt and
The Enterprise frequently advocated civil rights and black empowerment. In 1906, Mahammitt was involved in a struggle with a city council candidate who wished to exclude the sale of certain property to blacks in Omaha. In 1907, Mahammitt advocated in
The Enterprise the boycott of firms that refused to serve blacks. ==Masonry==