There are a number of notable people from North Omaha, Nebraska. This list includes people who lived in the community for any period of time, as well as groups and organizations of people within North Omaha.
John Adams, Jr., first African American elected to the Nebraska Legislature after it became a unicameral, Nebraska State Senator
Ernie Chambers, Nebraska State Senator, historical North Omaha community leader
Brenda Council, city councilmember
Lowen Kruse, Nebraska State Senator
Malcolm X, civil rights leader
George Wells Parker, founder of Hamitic League of the World
John Grant Pegg, Weights and Measure Inspector, 1910-1916, Omaha
Dr. Matthew Ricketts, first African American elected to the Nebraska Legislature, Nebraska State Senator
Silas Robbins, first African American lawyer in Omaha
Joe Rogers, Colorado Lieutenant Governor, 1999-2003 (Republican)
Standing Bear, imprisoned and tried at Fort Omaha in Standing Bear v. Crook
Susette LaFlesche Tibbles, Ponca member associated with the Standing Bear v. Crook trial
Thomas Tibbles, journalist associated with the Standing Bear v. Crook trial
Whitney Young, former head of Omaha Urban League
Aaron Manasses McMillan, Nebraska State Senator, founder of the Peoples Hospital in North Omaha
Ayesha Adu, writer and filmmaker
John Beasley, television and film actor
Sandra Organ, longtime Houston Ballet soloist
Gabrielle Union, television and film actress
Harold W. Andersen, Omaha World-Herald reporter
Mildred D. Brown, founder of Omaha Star, the oldest and perhaps the only African American newspaper founded by a woman
Tillie Olsen, Jewish author
Wallace Thurman, considered one of the greatest writers of the Harlem Renaissance
Lester Abrams, funk musician
Hank "Big Hank" Richard Davis, drummer, jazz, funk and blues musician
Wynonie Harris, rhythm & blues singer
Lloyd Hunter, big band leader
Preston Love, jazz player
Buddy Miles, musician
Geneice Wilcher, beauty pageant winner
Big Joe Williams, musician
Anna Mae Winburn, big band leader
Helen Jones Woods, big band trombonist
Mildred Brown, founder of Omaha Star newspaper
Warren Buffett, business magnate, investor, and philanthropist
Edward Creighton, pioneer businessman
John A. Creighton, pioneer businessman, philanthropist
Cathy Hughes, founder and president of Radio One
Manuel Lisa, fur trapper, founder of Fort Lisa
Houston Alexander, mixed martial arts fighter
Bob Boozer, former National Basketball Association player and gold medalist at the 1960 Summer Olympics
Carmen Butler, Dallas Cowboys Cheerleader
Terence Crawford, World Champion Boxer
Bob Gibson, National Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher for St. Louis Cardinals
Ahman Green, professional football player
Kenton Keith, professional football player
Ron Prince, former head football coach at Kansas State University
Johnny Rodgers, 1972 Heisman Trophy winner, College Football Hall of Fame Inductee, voted University of Nebraska's "player of the century"
Gale Sayers, professional football player, Pro Football Hall of Fame inductee
George Crook, leader of Fort Omaha
Alfonza W. Davis, Captain in the Tuskegee Airmen; born 1918 in North Omaha, graduate of Technical High School (Omaha, Nebraska), graduate of Omaha University, member of Kappa Alpha Psi; first black military aviator from Omaha to receive his wings from Tuskegee Field; KIA over Germany in 1944
Benjamin Foulois, stationed at Fort Omaha Balloon School
Stuart Heintzelman, stationed at Fort Omaha
Dan Christie Kingman, stationed at Fort Omaha
Frank Purdy Lahm, stationed at Fort Omaha Balloon School
Thomas Selfridge, stationed at Fort Omaha Balloon School
Buffalo Bill, founded his Wild West Show in North Omaha
Bertha Calloway, founded the Great Plains Black History Museum
Thomas Rogers Kimball, early Omaha architect; designed Webster Telephone Exchange Building and several other significant buildings in North Omaha
Rowena Moore, founder of the Malcolm X House Site
Ken Vavrina, influential liberal activist priest in North Omaha
Clarence W. Wigington, first African American municipal architect in the U.S; raised and began his career in Omaha
Joe Coe, local worker lynched by white mob
Jack Broomfield, locally significant community figure
Willy Brown, local worker lynched by white mob
Rick Galusha, host of blues and roots radio program, Pacific St. Blues, for 20+ years
List of people from North Omaha, Nebraska Wikipedia (Text) CC BY-SA