The Oklahoman

Freedom Center recommende­d for designatio­n as historic landmark

- BY WILLIAM CRUM Staff Writer wcrum@oklahoman.com

Marilyn Luper Hildreth says it is fitting that Oklahoma City recognize the role played by the former Mobil filling station at NE 25 and MLK in the fight for civil rights.

An advisory commission has recommende­d the Freedom Center be designated a historic landmark.

The building was home base for the NAACP Youth Council and headquarte­rs for activists who fought housing discrimina­tion and organized the 1969 Oklahoma City sanitation workers’ strike.

Its history is inextricab­ly tied to the sit-ins and desegregat­ion campaigns of the late 1950s and early ‘60s.

Vacant for the better part of a decade, the center is an overlooked but important character in the story of the Civil Rights Movement.

In its time, it fulfilled the vision of longtime civil rights activist and teacher Clara Luper to provide a place for children to find their footing in an often hostile world.

“We were able to maintain Freedom Center, not by the wealthy, but by the common, everyday people who worked,” Hildreth, Luper’s daughter, said last week.

The commission voted to recommend the Planning Commission and Oklahoma City Council confer historic status on the building at 2609 N Martin Luther King Ave.

Hildreth took part, as a 10-year-old member of the Youth Council, in the 1958 sit-ins that led to desegregat­ion of the Katz Drug Store lunch counter in downtown Oklahoma City.

“My mother was a dreamer,” Hildreth told the Historic Preservati­on Commission.

“She felt that all people were created in God’s glory. She believed that every child could learn.

“She taught school for over 40 years,” Hildreth said, “and all the programs she had were basically geared to young people.”

 ?? JIM BECKEL, THE OKLAHOMAN ARCHIVES] [PHOTO BY ?? A monument at the Freedom Center, 2609 N Martin Luther King Ave., honors local and national civil rights leaders. The former Mobil filling station was converted for use by the NAACP Youth Council in 1965. Damaged in a 1968 firebombin­g, the building has...
JIM BECKEL, THE OKLAHOMAN ARCHIVES] [PHOTO BY A monument at the Freedom Center, 2609 N Martin Luther King Ave., honors local and national civil rights leaders. The former Mobil filling station was converted for use by the NAACP Youth Council in 1965. Damaged in a 1968 firebombin­g, the building has...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States