Walk With ME
This is a podcast that walks through the experience of North 24th Street, and my journey over this project
“We need more investors and political leaders willing to invest in our community”
Dear the Street of dreams
Forever Lonley | Forever Frozen |
Forever Lonley | Forever Frozen |
This is a compilation of poems that bring my thoughts and experiences to life throughout this project about 24th Street.
Ode to Black Violence
Dear Black Boy,
Stop killing the boy who looks like you.
He may not have the same eyes, nose, and mouth as you, but your skin is the same, so he is you.
That bandanna and Block don’t change your history. Your souls are aligned like they have chemistry.
So don't kill the little boy with the same skin as you; differences aside, deep down, he is you.
If you keep killing your reflection, they will join in celebration because this is what they bank on.
They want our whole community to commit suicide so they won’t have to label it as genocide.
But they won’t have to label it anything if you keep killing the boy who looks like you,
the boy that is you.
Everlasting Flame
Even as the fire has settled and the smoke has turned to ash
My trauma still burns the biggest flame ever known to man
They tell me to tame it
Tell me to cover it
Force my hand to extinguish it
what they don’t understand is that I don’t know how to smother it
Instead of fighting, I just let it take the wheel, and it peels off so fast I smell burning as the rubber squeals
It takes laps around my brain, and at night, it makes me numb like my body is floating on another plane
I realize all this weight is not mine
But I am the simple truth of time
the truth that time does not heal all wounds,
as my grannies deepest fears wrap me in a cacoon
Just because you can no longer feel the heat does not mean the rubble does not suffocate me and my lungs are begging for room to breathe
The fire burns long after you hose us down and deem us clean because the trauma has now etched its way into my bloodstream
To a Lost Dream
Dear The Street of Dreams,
You may not know me, but I am well acquainted with you. I feel the vibration of your presence when I walk. I let your energy fuel me when I talk….
You were a dream of harmony now poisoned to be a nightmare full of tragedy. You have become the home of sad memories and collection plate for bodies. You have grown from drug dealer to drug lord polluting our community. You have become a monument of vacancy warding off trespassing.
I wish I could go back and hear the trumpets as community leaders sing and lift every voice. I wish I could be present for the movement instead of documenting your void.
Oh, street of dreams, you are not my story to tell. Oh, street of dreams you are not mine to carry but I will until I have chipped off enough of you and planted the seeds in others so you do not feel so heavy.
I won’t let them forget you; I won’t let them uproot you. I am just a girl you don’t know but this is the vow I have made to you.
love,
your out-loud admirer
JouRney Down the Deuce
24th Street, formally known as the Street of Dreams, has been a staple in the north Omaha community for over a century. It has become a time capsule of liberation and is stagnant in its elderly years. This project captures the lonely walk down 24th Street, filled with history and beauty on every corner.
Brief History:
24th Street got its nickname, the "Street of Dreams," because there was a time when people believed anything could happen there. The Street was filled with hotels, stores, clubs, hotels, and so much more, lining all the way to Dodge Street. The Street was lit up 24/7 and housed many Jewish, Scandinavian, and African American people.
The Street was indeed a dream, but America's biggest boogeyman, racism, plagued the area in 1919. September 28th, 1919, was the lynching of Will Brown after being accused of raping a white woman. His last breath was taken from him before he could stand trial, and this marked the downfall of 24th Street. For the next 40 years, civic duties were neglected by the city, and to eradicate the "ghetto," North 24th Street experienced a series of fires, riots, and bombings.
Historic Bull Durham "Makin's' Herded Off Tobacco Shelves Building
My Journey:
I began this project in the Spring of 2024, my senior year, and captured a series of images that showcase the beauty on N 24th Street. I walked up and down, capturing over 700 pictures, but towards the middle of my project, I started to realize I was missing something. That something was people. There are events and projects held on 24th Street, but when the planning is done, and the events have closed their doors, there are no people on a street that was born to be lively. On a regular evening or afternoon, there is silence where there should be chatter. I decided that instead of solely focusing on the history and old infrastructure, my focal point would be the lonely walk down the street, as it is often times vacant of human interaction. There are wonders and beautiful things along 24th Street, but what is the point of fixing up these things if there is no one to interact with them?
I hope you enjoy seeing this special part of North Omaha through my lens and appreciate the things I captured on my Lonely Walk Down N 24th Street.
Thank you!
Memory lane
Enjoy historic photos of 24th street
March for civil rights on 24th street, June 13th, 1966
1984 picture of the Calvin Memorial Presbytarian Church, on 24th & Wirt Street.
1967 picture of Technical High School drill team being featured in a Parade. Skeets BBQ in the background was a hub for socializing and social change, as was the dreamland ballroom, also featured in the background.
The Ritz Theatre was open in 24h & Patrick Street from 1935-1955.
1890 Presbyterian church, 1109 24th Street. This was the second church of its kind in Nebraska and then transformed into a Jewish Synagogue in 1908.
The DePorres Club Lead a boycott in front of Reed’s Ice Cream for their segregationist hiring practices.
Hall’s Confectinary Shop and “St. Louis Flat” apartments on 24th and Paul St.
The original Omaha Library on 2019 N 24th Street in 1907.
Advertisment from Crissey’s Pharmacy in 1913.
This is a comparison of time. Safeway opened in 1935 and was burned down and closed by 1960. This building now belongs to the Salvation Army and is a day center for children in the summer.
Metropolitian Building and Loan Association.
The headquarters of the United Front Against Fascism and Omaha Black Panther Party sat on 3508 N. 24th St. in the Kountze Place neighborhood.
1972 image of Skeet’s Carryout