Courtesy of Chris Landsberger

Who We Are

The Freedom Center of Oklahoma City is a 501c3 nonprofit organization established to educate, empower and enlighten our nation to reflect on the past, present and future of the Civil Rights Movement in Oklahoma.

As caretakers of the historic Freedom Center building, we develop facilities and programs to preserve our history and work towards a world without racism and bigotry.

What We Are Doing


On December 10, 2019, the citizens of Oklahoma City voted to pass MAPS 4, including $25 million for the restoration of the Freedom Center building and the creation of a new Clara Luper Civil Rights Center.

This five-acre campus will be constructed immediately adjacent to the historic building, transforming the city, state and nation's knowledge of our civil rights history and positively influencing the future of northeast Oklahoma City and our entire community. With exhibition and programming areas, a café, welcome center, outdoor and events spaces, this new campus will be an educational and community gathering place that honors the past, enlightens visitors today and empowers the next generation of leadership.

Since the passage of MAPS 4, the Freedom Center board of directors has successfully raised private funds to restore the historic building. Removing the Freedom Center restoration from the MAPS 4 scope of work and paying for it with private funds allows us to get started sooner and retain ownership of the building. Our architectural team has grown to include Atelier Cory Henry as lead designer for the restoration, in partnership with Bockus Payne Architecture as the architect of record. Thunder Team Construction has been hired as our construction manager. Work began in June 2022 and will be completed this year.

Courtesy of Atelier Cory Henry

Where We Came From


As the home of Oklahoma City's NAACP Youth Council, the Freedom Center served as a hub for civil rights activity for many years. Clara Luper served as the Youth Council's sponsor. A career public-school teacher, Mrs. Luper taught her students and others in the community, including clergy members, non-African-Americans and business and civic leaders, to employ nonviolent means to protest injustices. This was shown most famously through drugstore and department store sit-ins that effectively ended longtime race-based segregation and other discriminatory policies. She led by example, demonstrating her personal commitment by going to jail 26 times for peaceful protests. Under her leadership, Oklahoma City's NAACP Youth Council began the local sit-in movement on August 19, 1958, more than a year before the Greensboro sit-ins began.

Just as civil rights efforts continued to address new issues after the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, Oklahoma City’s NAACP Youth Council sought new activities once their goal of integration of public places had been largely achieved. When speaking of the founding of the Freedom Center, Luper noted intent to build on the success of the sit-ins: “we needed something to keep the movement going, and to keep the youth involved.” By the summer of 1967, arrangements were made to acquire a former Mobil gas station at the corner of NE 25th Street and what was then N. Eastern Avenue, now N. Martin Luther King Ave.

Luper told reporters that the center’s goals were to “provide opportunities for deprived children to grow up properly, to learn the value of self help and to see the adult world supported by a sense of belonging.” For the next forty years, the Center worked diligently toward that goal, providing classes, activities, and summer programs for countless Oklahoma City youth. Beyond these community minded goals, though, the Freedom Center served as the headquarters for the NAACP Youth Council, and would be indelibly linked to Oklahoma City’s most important civil rights battles for decades to come.

Board of Directors


Leonard D. Benton

Rev. Lee E. Cooper, Jr.

David Duplissis

Joyce A. Henderson

Karlos K. Hill, PhD

Joyce Jackson

Aletia Timmons, Chairman

Cecelia Robinson Woods, Vice Chairman

Calvin Whittaker, Treasurer

Ledelia Jimerson, Secretary

heather ahtone, PhD

Dianna Berry

In Memoriam: We will forever be grateful for the leadership of Sam Bowman who served as a board member from 2019-2021. View Sam Bowman’s Obituary.

Staff


Marilyn Luper Hildreth

Garland Pruitt

Rev. John A. Reed

Lelia Reed

Gwenda Roberts

Robert J. Ross

Christina L. Beatty, Executive Director

Rickey T. L. Hunt, Sr., Finance + Operations Director

Jordan Broiles, Programs Manager

Joyce Hishaw-Willis, Development + Communications Coordinator