With increasingly sophisticated jobs, the fast usage of cars and other motor vehicles, and loose leadership letting the wealthy get rich, modern Omaha began emerging in the 1910s. One of the main elements were suburban developments, and the largest of them was developed by a real estate man named Charles Martin. This is a history of the Minne Lusa Historic District in North Omaha.

The Cornfield

Circa 1914 Minne Lusa Historic District, North Omaha, Nebraska
This is Minne Lusa at the beginning of construction in 1916. We’re standing just west of 30th and Newport looking east towards the Missouri River. A composite view of the Minne Lusa neighborhood. This view is looking west to east with Mary Street in the middle and Miller Park to the right with all the trees. Newport Avenue is the dirt road to the left near the photographer.

Before it became the Minne Lusa neighborhood, this area was part of the Parker Farm, a 600-acre collection of land amassed by pioneer banker James Parker (1824-1892). One of the original owners of the Bank of Florence, Parker kept a farm across all of the land including Minne Lusa, Florence Field and beyond for several decades. In the 1910s, he sold the property forming the Minne Lusa neighborhood to a real estate developer named Charles Wood Martin (1878-1955).

“When we bought the land that is now Minne Lusa it was a big cornfield of 128 acres. Endowed by nature with beautiful rolling contour, it needed but the magic wand of man to turn it in a few days into a district of contented home owners.”

—Charles Martin, developer of the Minne Lusa neighborhood

In 1893, nationally renowned landscape architect H.W.W. Cleveland (1800-1914) designed a citywide boulevard and park system for the City of Omaha. The cherry on his vision was called “Omaha’s Most Beautiful Mile,” which was a tree-lined boulevard packed with fancy homes; a smooth, winding roadway; and gorgeous flowerbeds along its mile-plus length. Its subdivision, called Norwood, was packed with river view lots for large and medium sized houses. Today, this is part of the section of Florence Boulevard between Storz Expressway and Read Street.

In 1880, the Florence Water Works were completed immediately west of the town of Florence. Nine years later, the American Water Company built the Minne Lusa Pumping Station at the Water Works, and sold the City of Omaha private water that was purified there. The station’s owners said the words they made up, “minne lusa,” supposedly meant clear water in the Sioux language. In reality, the name was a hyperforeignism. A hyperforeignism is a type of qualitative hypercorrection that makes speakers mis-say loanword, and then use it for purposes it was never intended. In this case, the name of the neighborhood was probably taken from the neighboring pumping station or from the creek running through the neighborhood. The creek, which was known colloquially as Manuel Lisa Creek, was named after the Spaniard fur trapper who had a small fort to the north a century before the neighborhood was built. There were other businesses in the neighborhood with the name, too, including the Minne Lusa Lumber Company, which opened circa 1900.

Omaha’s Most Beautiful Mile led to the undeveloped Parker Farm for 25 years. The crown of the ride was originally Miller Park, featuring rolling hills and a soft creek* flowing through the middle of it. When Parker put up the land north of it for sale, Charles Martin snatched it up.

Fancy Name, Better Land

Minne Lusa neighborhood in 1916.
This is a 1916 map highlighting the Minne Lusa neighborhood within North Omaha. It was taken from an ad in the Omaha Bee.

Charles Martin bought the land comprising Minne Lusa in 1915. That was than 35 years after the Florence Water Works were opened; 25 years after the Miller Park was created; more than 20 years after Florence Boulevard was finished; and two years before the City of Florence to the north was annexed into the City of Omaha.

Banker Parker’s son, Fred Parker (1854-1902), kept a studio west of present-day North 30th and Redick Streets at the Parker Estate. After Frederick and the other heirs got a hold of the Parker Estate, for a long time they kept sowing his acres with tight rows of corn. In 1891, they sold a large chunk of the estate to Dr. George L. Miller. Part of that became the Miller Park and the Miller Park neighborhood. Later another chunk was sold to a man who helped develop the Norwood subdivision mentioned earlier, as well as the Belle Isle subdivision in the Miller Park neighborhood. His name was Charles Martin.

This is the commercial building at North 30th and Baumann Streets in 1938 and 2015. Shown are the North Side Drug Store, Safeway and Colfax Garage. Today, its the Four Aces Pawn Shop.

In 1907, the Royal Amusement Company developed plans for 40-acres of today’s Minne Lusa neighborhood. Royal paid $65,000 to an architect named J. B. Mason to design six buildings, including a pavilion, a 2-story dance hall, two dining halls, a boat house, club house and a roller rink. The amusement park never came to exist though, and I can’t find any evidence any work was ever done on it.

The Biggest Subdivision in Omaha

Minne Lusa neighborhood, North Omaha, Nebraska
This is a street in the Minne Lusa neighborhood in 1926. Can you name it?

When it was built, Minne Lusa was the biggest subdivision in Omaha to date.

Located in the northern end of present-day North Omaha, present-day Minne Lusa is bounded by North 24th Street to North 30th Street; Craig Street to Redick Avenue. When he built it, Martin bragged about the subdivision having “six miles of water mains, 47 fire hydrants, 12 miles of sidewalks, an ornamental lighting system, 1700 shade trees, and last but not least, a clubhouse.”

As World War I was starting, a local developer named Charles Martin made plans to develop that cornfield. It was one of the last great uncompleted spaces between the Miller Park neighborhood and Florence, and between 1915 and 1926, Martin finished his vision. Different from all of his peers, Martin did not plan a small town like Benson, Dundee or Florence. Instead, he built the largest subdivision in Omaha’s history to that point. Centered on the lulling Minne Lusa Boulevard, the Minne Lusa neighborhood supported a dozen east / west streets, too, along with three north / south roadways.

However, Martin didn’t want to focus everything on a business district, but instead, just homes. Adding just a few amenities to the neighborhood, Minne Lusa became a unique contribution to the City of Omaha’s growth. Some of those amenities included the park-like Minne Lusa Boulevard and the exclusive Prettiest Mile Club. Businesses and churches accumulated around Minne Lusa.

Martin choose the area carefully. When he started, streetcars roamed from Dodge Street to Florence along North 30th Street, and from downtown Omaha almost to Read Street along North 24th Street. A streetcar began running from Fort Omaha to Florence in 1894, and Martin knew to cash in on that.

He was designing for Omaha’s growing middle class population. When he began in 1916, a lot of people started buying his homes: accountants, bookkeepers, buyers, clerks, comptrollers, contractors, dentists, department Managers, engineers, foremen, lawyers, managers, mechanics, small business owners, physicians, postal clerks, salesmen, secretaries, stenographers, teachers, travel agents and company vice presidents. They generally didn’t own cars, rode the streetcars, and shopped very locally.

However, within a decade, although the same types of people were still buying the homes, they were driving their own cars and needed garages. Almost every home in the neighborhood ended up with a garage.

Following are some of the features of today’s Minne Lusa neighborhood.

Homes

Minne Lusa neighborhood, North Omaha, Nebraska
This is a home in Minne Lusa circa 1926. Can you name where its at?

The homes in Minne Lusa were supposed to be affordable and varied. Charles Martin wanted his neighborhood to focus on the latest and most popular architectural style though, which was the Craftsman style that was inspired by the Arts and Crafts movement. This approach to designing homes had several features, including:

  • Well-designed homes
  • Wide front porches
  • Low-pitched, gabled roofs
  • Pointed window arches
  • Tapered columns
  • Partially paned doors
  • Multi-paned windows
  • Earthtone paint jobs
  • Single dormers
  • Exposed rafter tails and beams under deep roof eaves
  • Knee braces
  • Brick fireplaces and wooden fittings
  • Stone and tiles
  • Asymmetrical composition

Seeking am architect who could manifest his vision, Martin hired young Omaha architect Everett S. Dodds. Dodds’ designs for Minne Lusa were particularly important because of their simplicity and adaptability. Dodd created a Craftsman-style home design catalogue that could be used for the entire development with several home styles repeating through a number of variations that made each one look unique. Unlike other subdivisions built in the same time period, Martin didn’t require brick exteriors. Instead, he wanted a variety of surfaces covering his neighborhood, including stucco and wood. Keeping with the Craftsman tradition, a lot of wood was used to build Minne Lusa. Other housing styles throughout the Minne Lusa neighborhood include the Colonial Revival, Neo-Classical, Tudor Revival, and Ranch styles, with two Prairie style homes, too. One of the finest and earliest homes in Minne Lusa was designed by Charles Martin himself, and is located at the intersection of Mary and Minne Lusa Boulevard.

6718 Minne Lusa Boulevard, North Omaha, Nebraska
This is 6718 Minne Lusa Boulevard, designed in the Mission style by Charles Martin. This is the same style of design as the original Prettiest Mile Club building.

800 lots were sold on 30 blocks throughout Minne Lusa. Martin was so successful with this subdivision that he took on the development of 211 acres north and west of North 30th Street that formerly belonged to the Army at Fort Omaha. It was called Florence Field. The Florence Field subdivision designed by Martin had 1,100 lots and was intended for a more exclusive homeowner.

Places in the Neighborhood

When the Minne Lusa neighborhood was established, there were many parts and places within and around it. These include the homes featured above; following is information on churches, a club, and other places. Here are details about several of them.

Minne Lusa Boulevard

Minne Lusa Boulevard, North Omaha, Nebraska
This is an image of Minne Lusa Boulevard circa 1917.

The City of Omaha’s beautiful boulevard system, designed in 1892, was designed to supplement the city’s parks by acting as a ribbon that ties them all together. Upon seeing the city complete the Belvedere Boulevard at the southwest corner of Miller Park, Charles Martin had a vision for his new neighborhood.

He saw two meandering avenues lining either side of the Minne Lusa Creek that weaved its way in a gentle valley between the hills Martin bought for his neighborhood. He laid concrete curbs and streets immediately, channeling the creek through a sewer and covering it with trees on a grass-covered median, and planting soft glowing streetlights the entire length of the strip. The lots lining the Minne Lusa Boulevard were designated for larger houses and cost more to buy.

Martin originally wanted to join his boulevard with North 28th Street in Florence, which was supposed to be made into a boulevard, too. However, when that didn’t happen, Charles Martin designed Martin Avenue to connect to the Fontenelle Boulevard in the far western end of his Florence Field subdivision. This completed a wonderful loop that tied together his neighborhoods into the lifeblood of citywide traffic via the boulevard system.

Businesses

As Minne Lusa grew, the commercial needs of the neighborhood made themselves known. The Miller Park Grocery and a service station developed on the southeast corner of North 24th and Redick Avenue. The Minne Lusa Tavern opened at 7202 North 30th in the 1950s. By 1962, it was the Minne Lusa Restaurant, and by 1978 it was closed. Other businesses surrounded the neighborhood too.

The store 6604 North 30th Street opened as a Piggly Wiggly Grocery Store on April 24th, 1924. By 1938, the store was called a Safeway. By 1945 it was a Save More Super Market, and by 1950 it was Minne Lusa Hardware. They closed in 1976. Four Aces Pawn Shop was opened in the location at some point afterwards.

YMCA

The North Omaha YMCA opened at 6330 North 30th Street in 1946. The original building was a repurposed storefront. In 1958, it was demolished and replaced with another building, which in turn was demolished in 2011 after the YMCA moved out in the 1990s and opened a different facility on Ames Avenue.

Churches

Several churches were built along North 30th Street near Minne Lusa. They included Miller Park Presbyterian, Trinity Lutheran, Blessed Sacrament Catholic, and Parkside Baptist. Mount Olive Lutheran eventually built on the northern edge of Minne Lusa.

Other Places…

Challenges and Opportunities

This is a leafy street in the Minne Lusa neighborhood recently. The foliage is a result of longterm planning by architect Dodd and the vision of Charles Martin.

Since its heydays, the Minne Lusa neighborhood has weathered many assaults from many angles.

In the 1970s, the City of Omaha seriously considered running the North Freeway straight through the neighborhood in order to have a connector directly from downtown Omaha to I-680. However, concerned neighbors and community organizations successfully fended off this attack, and the highway ended south of the Miller Park neighborhood.

The Birchwood Club transferred ownership in the 1930s, and endured a poorly executed remodel that stripped it of its historical beauty in the 1960s. The warm, earthy stucco on the outside of the building was replaced with a tacky industrial-type siding and cheap-looking brick, while almost every element in the interior was demolished and rebuilt.

It was sold again in the early 1980s and renamed the Viking Ship. The ballroom was repurposed as a gymnastics facility and the bowling alley was ripped out and replaced with a workout gym and boxing facility. My brother and I boxed there with Kenny when we were young.

The insidious phenomenon of white flight has reared its head throughout North Omaha’s history. Apparently, many middle class white people do not want to live by African Americans. Once thought to be a problem of the last century, student bodies in local schools and homeownership trends show that it is still a relevant factor in home buying in Omaha. Coupled with a generation of aging homeowners looking to move away or simply dying, white flight took a swipe at Minne Lusa.

In the 1990s, home ownership within the neighborhood took a hit as landlords began buying up the beautiful houses in the area that were undervalued by banks, the City of Omaha and Douglas County. The outcome of this behavior led to the degradation of the neighborhood as absentee landlords and under-capable renters lowered the morale of the neighborhood. Despite the value of being well-connected to the rest of the city through the surrounding highways, homebuyers saw Minne Lusa as undesirable and refused to buy homes there. At the same time, the ratio of African Americans to white people living in Minne Lusa raised higher, too.

Fortunately, determination and community building are showing us that mixed race, mixed income neighborhoods in Omaha can survive and thrive. Today, the Minne Lusa neighborhood is a prime demonstration of that reality.

The Minne Lusa House and Beyond

Minne Lusa Signage, North Omaha, Nebraska
This is a new sign marking the Minne Lusa Historic District, which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2014.

In the early part of the 2010s, a movement within the neighborhood led to a resurgence in community building and positive growth. Between the emergence of new leadership in the Minne Lusa / Miller Park Neighborhood Association and the establishment of the Minne Lusa House, a lot of momentum has been borne of this neighborhood.

For a decade, the Minne Lusa House at 2737 Mary Street acted as like neighborhood center offering social gatherings, community meetings and history presentations among other activities. The women who launched it, Sharon Olson and Beth Richards, were local homeowners with a vision. Their actions sparked inspirations citywide, and today their actions are respected, as is the memory of the iconic Minne Lusa House.

Soon afterwards, a group of community members worked together and rallied local resources in support of placing the neighborhood on the National Register of Historic Places. They were successful, and in 2014 they successfully secured a federal designation as the Minne Lusa Residential Historic District.

Neef House, 2884 Iowa Street, North Omaha, Nebraska
The Neef House at 2884 Iowa Street was built in 1929 and straddles the Minne Lusa and Florence Field neighborhoods. According to the National Parks Service, it is the best, and perhaps only, steel house property in Nebraska.

Additionally, the Minne Lusa Boulevard is included separately on the National Register of Historic Places in a listing for the Omaha Parks and Boulevard System. One of the homes in Minne Lusa, the Harry B. Neef House, is also listed separately on the National Register, too, because of its unique construction in the city.

The neighborhood continues its rebound today. According to their blog, home values are rebounding right now and property ownership is reflecting a larger vision. Neighbors are taking care of their neighborhood again, and Minne Lusa is growing. Here’s to a bright, bold future for my friends in North Omaha’s Minne Lusa neighborhood!

1916 Minne Lusa Map, North Omaha, Nebraska
This circa 1916 map of the Minne Lusa neighborhood shows its original boundaries, including Vane, Redick, 24th and 30th.

Historical Tour

  1. Minne Lusa, N. 24th St. to 30th Street; Craig St. to Redick Avenue
  2. North 24th Street
  3. Minne Lusa Pumping Station at the Florence Water Works, Grebe St. and John J. Pershing Drive
  4. Former Miller Park Grocery, North 24th and Redick Avenue
  5. Trinity Lutheran Church, North 30th and Redick Avenue
  6. Viking Ship (aka Prettiest Mile Club and Birchwood Club), 2582 Redick Avenue
  7. Minne Lusa Boulevard, Redick Avenue to J.J. Pershing Drive
  8. Site of the Minne Lusa Creek, Redick Avenue to Mary Street
  9. Site of the North Miller Park Drive Bridge, north end of the Miller Park pond
  10. Miller Park Pavilion, 2707 Redick Ave
  11. Site of the Miller Park YMCA
  12. Mandela Elementary School

You Might Like…

This is a history of the Minne Lusa Historic District for the North Omaha History Podcast with Adam Fletcher Sasse.

MY ARTICLES ABOUT HISTORIC NEIGHBORHOODS IN NORTH OMAHA
National Register of Historic Places Historic Districts in North Omaha: 24th and Lake Historic District | Benson Downtown Historic District | Country Club Historic District | Dundee/Happy Hollow Historic District | Fairacres Historic District | Fort Omaha Historic District | Minne Lusa Historic DistrictNicholas Street Historic District
Historic Neighborhoods in North Omaha: Bedford PlaceBelvedere Point | Bemis Park | Benson | Briggs | Bungalow City | Carter Lake, Iowa | Central Park | Clifton Hill | Collier Place | Creighton University | Crown Point | DeBolt | Druid Hill | East Omaha | Fairfax | Florence | Florence Field | Fort Omaha | Fontenelle View | Gifford Park | Gold Coast (Cathedral) | High Point | Jefferson Square | Kellom Heights | Kountze Place | Lakewood Gardens | Little Russia | Long School | Malcolm X Memorial | Miller Park | Miller Park Duplex Historic District | Monmouth Park | Montclair | Near North Side | North Downtown Omaha | Omaha View | Orchard Hill | Plum Nelly | Prairie Park | Prettiest Mile in Omaha | Prospect Place | Raven Oaks | Redman | Saratoga | Sherman | Squatter’s Row | Sulphur Springs | Ponca Hills | Wakonda | Walnut Hill | Winspear Triangle | Wyman Heights
Lost Towns in North Omaha: Benson | Briggs | Cutler’s Park | DeBolt | East Omaha | Florence | Saratoga | Sulphur Springs | Winter Quarters

Elsewhere Online


BONUS PICS!

2886 Vane Street, Minne Lusa Historic District, North Omaha, Nebraska.
This is a 1920s pic of the doorway still at 2886 Vane Street in the Minne Lusa Historic District.
Minne Lusa Tavern Little League Uniform
A Little League baseball uniform sponsored by the old Minne Lusa Tavern. Photo courtesy of the Minne Lusa House.
A typical street corner in the Minne Lusa neighborhood circa 1921.
Minne Lusa neighborhood, North Omaha, Nebraska
This circa 1921 pic of a street in Minne Lusa shows the beauty of the Craftsman-style bungalows filling the blocks.
2886 Vane Street, Minne Lusa Historic District, North Omaha, Nebraska
This is 2886 Vane Street in the Minne Lusa neighborhood circa 1921. It was the largest home built in the neighborhood.
Minne Lusa, North Omaha, Nebraska
This is a photo of an original Everett S. Dodd design from the Minne Lusa neighborhood house catalogue, circa 1916. Can you identify the address?
Dodd House Design, Minne Lusa, North Omaha, Nebraska
This is the current appearance of an Everett Dodd house design in the Minne Lusa neighborhood. It looks nearly identical to Dodd’s design. Can you identify the address of this house?
Dodd Designed House, Minne Lusa, North Omaha, Nebraska
This is another home designed by Everett Dodd. The homes in his catalogue featured wide eves, front porches, circular stairs and many other Craftsman-style elements shown here. Can you identify the address of this home?
House in Minne Lusa, North Omaha, Nebraska
This is one of many large, fine homes along Minne Lusa Boulevard. Its wide eves, Spanish-style roofing and sharp wood accents show its adherence to Arts and Crafts style design.
James Monroe Parker (1824-1902), North Omaha, Nebraska
James Monroe Parker (1824-1902) homesteaded the land where the Minne Lusa neighborhood stands. His estate sold the land to Charles Martin’s company for development.
Mount Olive Lutheran Church, Minne Lusa, North Omaha, Nebraska
A 1948 Drawing of Mount Olive Lutheran Church in the Minne Lusa neighborhood of North Omaha.
The drug store, grocery store and garage at N. 30th and Newport Avenue in North Omaha, Nebraska.
The North Side Drug, Safeway grocery store and the Colfax Garage at N. 30th and Newport Avenue.
Minne Lusa Lumber Company, North 30th and Weber Streets, North Omaha, Nebraska
Minne Lusa Lumber Company was at North 30th and Weber Streets between 1900 and 1912.
Minne Lusa Restaurant (Red and Ted's), N. 30th and Martin Ave, North Omaha, Nebraska
This is the Minne Lusa Restaurant, once called Red and Ted’s, and located at the intersection of North 30th and Martin Avenue. It was demolished in the 1990s.
Types of Homes in Minne Lusa, 1916.
This 1918 ad for the “Types of Homes in Minne Lusa” illustrates the diverse selection of Craftsman-style and Arts-and-Crafts style designs available. These designs and the homes that still exist today are the reason the Minne Lusa Historic District was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2014.
This is a 2023 satellite image of the Minne Lusa Historic District in North Omaha.
This is a 2023 satellite image of the Minne Lusa Historic District in North Omaha.

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33 responses to “A History of the Minne Lusa Historic District in North Omaha”


  1. I certainly enjoyed reading your page on Minne Lusa . I grew up in the post war – new Dillon development on Wyoming Street.
    We were married in May of 1969 and our reception was held at the Birchwood club so it was still in existence at that time. I’d really lie to see someone renovate and reopen the Minne Lusa Theater.


  2. […] Article: History of Minne Lusa […]


  3. […] North Omaha History article: A Short History of Minne Lusa […]


  4. […] that eventually comprised North Omaha were also enabled to grow because of streetcars, including Minne Lusa, Miller Park, Benson, and […]


  5. Your tone is appalling. Don’t respond to my article if you can’t write decently.


    1. Sorry about that. I shouldn’t have used the word appalling. Thanks for your work on this. I should have just focused on my recollections. Steve


      1. Thanks Steve, appreciate that. I want to get it right, I promise, but I rely on what I find in newspapers and books, and generally not on memory or experience. If you have anything to add or corrections or anything, please share – I’d love that! I know there are mistakes, but I’d rather get North O’s history out there incorrect than not at all, which has been the case for more than a century now!


      2. Adam, thanks for doing this. I graduated from North in 1969. Throughout my high school years (1967-69) we had sock hops at the North Branch YMCA and we also went there for Hi-Y. I can’t find a picture at this time but I do have high school friends on Facebook that could corroborate this. S


  6. What a wonderful article on Minne Lusa and its history. Growing up in Florence and having friends from Minne Lusa, this write up brought back some very fond memories. Thank you for taking me down memory lane with a well written article and wonderful pictures.


  7. I am familiar with the Minne Lusa neighborhood. Growing up in the 50s and 60s I had friends who lived there. I recently retired from teaching at Minne Lusa elementary for 18 years! I enjoyed your article…. but I remember going to functions at the Birchwood Club while it was still Birchwood Club clear through most of the 70s.


    1. That’s great Ann – thanks for sharing that!


  8. In the Lakota language, “mni luzaha” means swift water. That could likely be the origin of this neighborhood’s name.


  9. This is very interesting. I can’t wait to explore it! In the Lakota language, “mni luzaha” means swift water. I’m guessing that might be the actual origin of the name.
    Jen


  10. Thank You so much for your time to research this I grew up on Newport 2427 to be exact went to Minne Lusa school absolutely the best years I loved. that neighborhood again thank you

    1. Jennifer A Finn Sutton Avatar
      Jennifer A Finn Sutton

      Joyce, you say you grew up in 2427 Newport Avenue? That’s where we are now, homeowners. I’ve been trying to find history on the place and surrounding neighborhood. This page was an interesting read and helped me place some things, then there’s you. If you have any information, photos, etc. I’d love to see them. Please let me know. Ty.


      1. Built in 1917, the house at 2427 Newport Avenue was originally owned by Adolph E. Samuelson (1858-1927) and his wife Augusta E. Samuelson (1862-1923). They were Swedish immigrants, and Adolph was an upholsterer at 4426 Dodge Street in Omaha. The couple immigrated to Omaha in the 1880s. Their children included Paul (1897-1959), John (1886-1938), and their daughter Korinn J. Allyn (1885-1968). Korinn and her husband bought the house with her husband Epheraim (1886-1951) from her father. Paul served in WWI as a wagon driver and returned home from the war in 1919. Korinn and Ephraim’s daughter Virginia Allyn was a North High student when she was featured in a 1933 edition of the Omaha Bee for her dancing. By 1938, Virginia was a 20-year-old student at Grinnell College when she became a member of Phi Beta Lambda, a national honorary music fraternity.

        The house went up for sale in 1955. In the 1960s and 70s, Walter L. Blackford (1930-2005) and his wife Alice J. Blackford (1928-2014) lived there along with his mother Nellie Blackford (1903-1987). In 1971 the family was in the newspaper, noted for their centiginarian great-grandmother Clara Alice Watson (1871-1973) who occasionally came from Council Bluffs to watch her great-grandchildren at the house. They sold the house in 1972.

        The large family of James L. Johnson and his wife Adell T. Brown lived there for the remainder of the 1970s and moved away in 1980 after one of their five daughters died very young. Robert Grimm was 28 years old when he was living at the house in 1985. The house was for sale again in 1987, and in 1988 Scott Humphrey lived there. John Stokke lived there in 1989 and offered guitar lessons from the house.

        The house was sold again in 2002. For the next several years, the house was the site of several police calls related to violence, gang activity and other crimes. In 2010, a drive-by shooting killed De-Acie Jermaine “Acie” Robinson (1983-2010) and wounded two others there.

        The house went up for sale the next year, and in 2016 Nicholas Sutton got a permit to renovate it. Hope that’s all interesting and useful to you Jennifer.

    2. Jennifer A Finn Sutton Avatar
      Jennifer A Finn Sutton

      ALL of it is super interesting, thank you. I’ve always been very interested in architecture and history, but am newly learning how to discover more information on it all. Nick is my husband too.


  11. Where was the original location of the train station?


    1. Which train station Fran? The Florence Train Station was originally located east of N. 28th and Tucker Streets, next to the Minne Lusa Water Works. You can learn more at https://northomahahistory.com/2017/04/26/railroads-in-north-omaha/


  12. Hi Adam, I love your articles! On the question of the Minne Lusa name, I thought the same thing about hyperforeignism. I assumed the natives would have trouble pronouncing Manuel Lisa. But then I was in South Dakota at a mine and there was a map that said Minne Lusa formation. I was shocked and I did some digging and found this.

    https://www.uwyo.edu/eori/_files/minn_consortia/jackson%20pml.pdf

    The mine manager thought it was limestone formation that filtered water 🙂


    1. Hi Nick, and thanks for your note! That’s a great webpage about the minnelusa formation, and one that’s been brought to my attention before. Its important to note that the article itself undermines the argument about the phrase being a hyperforeignism when it acknowledges the term was coined in 1895. There is usage of the name Minne Lusa Creek in the early Omaha newspapers dating to the 1880s and the Florence newspaper in the 1870s. I just think the hyperforeignism of Manuel Lisa’s name is too convenient. If the phrase “minnelusa” was a “Sioux” word, it would appear in a dictionary of either the Lakota or the Nakota or the Dakota… but it doesn’t.

      Lakota dictionary: https://www.lakotadictionary.org/phpBB3/nldo.php
      Nakota terms: http://www.native-languages.org/assiniboine_words.htm
      Dakota dictionary: https://fmp.cla.umn.edu/dakota/recordlist.php

      I would really love a definitive answer, so if you find anything please let me know! Thanks Nick–and let me know if there’s anything you want me to research and write about!


    2. I grew up in the neighborhood in the 50’s and attended Minne Lusa elementary. I was told Minne Lusa was a member of a local tribe, perhaps the Omaha Indians, and (maybe) was associated with the Lewis and Clark expedition. A fuzzy recollection.

  13. Bernie Sommer Avatar
    Bernie Sommer

    Very nice and interesting article. I grew up at 2792 Laurel Ave. I remember an old truck that drove around selling fruit and vegetables. The lady would sing “strawberry’s… cherries” I believe the vehicle they drove was like a model “A” truck. (very old).


    1. Thanks for sharing that memory Bernie. You might like my article on the history of the Miller Park neighborhood even more. If you’re interested, its at https://northomahahistory.com/2015/02/13/a-history-of-omahas-miller-park-neighborhood/


  14. I grew up in Minne Lusa in the 60’s and 70’s, so this article brought back the memories. Thank you 3the pro you put into this article.


  15. I stumbled onto this story after reading about a dog attack. I have very fond memories on living in Minne Lusa area in the early 1980’s. My family lived in the house pictured in the story at 2886 Vane Street, which was the largest house in the area. It was originally built by a doctor, and then our church bought it from him, and it was part of the Pillar of Fire Church for many years. The caretaker for the church let it run down, and the church sent my family there as missionaries at the end of 1979. I ended up going to Blessed Sacrament School for a couple years, and played little league for the Florence-Coulhoun little league. Our church sold the house and we ended up having to move out. We headed back to Texas, and I have not been back to Omaha since my freshman year in high school. Like I said, I have a lot of fond memories of that house and Omaha.


    1. Hi again, Adam. I just discovered this great piece on the Minne Lusa neighborhood after seeing your new article on the Minne Lusa School. I grew up near 25th and Ida along with two younger brothers. We all went to Minne Lusa School for Kindergarten and Blessed Sacrament for grades 1 through 8, where I graduated in 1961. I have so many fond memories of this great neighborhood from the 1950s and early 1960s – I left for college in 1965.

      The article mentioned a grocery store and gas station at the corner of 24th and Redick. I remember well the big red horse of that Mobil station and the kind proprietor who let kids in the neighborhood use his air hose for their bike tires. If he wasn’t busy, he fix a flat for free too – a nice fellow! Incidentally, gas prices were usually between 25 and 30 cents per gallon.

      Between the gas station and a grocery store was a drug store which, like most drug stores of the time, had a soda fountain. Naturally, that soda fountain was a regular stop for kids. Soft drinks were mixed from syrup and soda water in disposable conical paper cups which went on top of a metal holder. They came in two sizes: 5 and 10 cents. Chocolate malts and banana splits were a quarter. Most candy bars were a nickel, but Mounds and Almond Joy were a dime.

      There were other ice cream options in the neighborhood including a Reed’s at 30th and Vane and a Zesto in nearby Florence.

      Next to that Reed’s ice cream was Johnson’s grocery store where our family traded. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Johnson were wonderful people and pretty much ran the store by themselves. Mr. Johnson was an artist as a butcher and always had great meat products prepared to order for his many appreciative customers. My mother did not drive, and Mr. Johnson delivered orders phoned in in the morning that same afternoon. I still remember his truck pulling up in our driveway with those deliveries.

      My first foot-long hot dog was at the Minne Lusa Tavern, also known as Red’s an Ted’s after the owners. This was a favorite neighborhood hangout, but I had already gone to college before I was old enough to hangout at the bar.

      Enough for now, but thanks Adam for the opportunity for a trip down memory lane. – Joe


  16. I grew up in the Minne Lusa neighborhood in the 1980’s – early 90’s. Minne Lusa, McMillan & North are the schools I went to. LOTS of fond memories! I’ve been reminiscing as of late & the stink bomb trees outside Minne Lusa keep coming to the forefront of my mind… Weird, maybe, but for the life of me I can’t think of what those darn things actually were! If anyone else remembers those smelly stink bombs, would you please remind me what the heck kind of tree/shrub those were?? It’s making me crazy! Thanks in advance, to whomever..

    1. Michelle Almaguer Avatar
      Michelle Almaguer

      The “stink bombs” are the berries of the female Ginkgo or Gingko Biloba Tree.


  17. Who was Lumir Buresh?


  18. I grew up in the Minne Lusa neighborhood Iowa St) and went to Minne Lusa school. Reading these comments brings back so many memories. Walking to Reeds Ice Cream, eating at Red and Ted’s. The Neef house you mentioned was on the corner and so beautiful. Ginkgo trees are still my favorite as they lined the playground. We played ball on the “island” in the middle of the boulevard.


  19. […] pequeños barrios al sur de ella. Uno period un desarrollo fantásticamente concebido llamado Minne Lusay el otro period el Barrio del parque Miller, aparentemente construido para ser casas para hombres […]


  20. in the first photo of the Minne Lusa fields the dirt road to the left is in fact not Newport, it is Titus ave the empty lot right in front of the photo is where my house stands now!
    this is so cool thank you for all the hard work and dedication you put into this article

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