TCM Podcast
Who's Hoo?
Season 1, Episode 7
The Owl Club’s debutante debuts set the stage for many prestigious African Americans in the Mile High City.
The 1971 Owl Club Debutantes gather for their group photo. Former US Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice, is featured standing in the back row fourth from the left.
Transcript
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Sam Bock [00:00:05] Welcome to the Colorado Magazine Podcast from History Colorado. I'm Sam Bock, managing editor of the Colorado magazine, and I'm excited to bring you audio versions of some of our very favorite articles. On this episode, producer Tyler Hill brings you the story of how the Owl Club set the stage for many prestigious African American women in the Mile High City.
Tyler Hill [00:00:30] Hi, I'm Tyler Hill, former producer and co-host of the History Colorado podcast Lost Highways with my friend Noel Black, and I've been asked to read this article from the archives of the Colorado magazine for you. “Who's Hoo?” by Tyler Allen. Quote, you guys are nothing but a bunch of night owls, end quote. For eight hardworking railroad pullmen, waiters, and businessmen, the house at 2538 Marion Street was the perfect place for late night weekend functions. At times, a young Charles C.T. Smith would sneak down to the basement and watch his father play cards and spread laughter and fellowship with friends. Little did he know he was watching the gentleman who would change African American history and culture in the heart of Denver. In 1941, Ferris Cassius Sr., Dillard Collins, Howard Denton, James R. Gross, C. Columbus Johnson, Ralph D. Mason, D. Smith, and Carl Terrell had been spending most of their Saturday nights together. But one night, the group set their cards aside to start thinking about how to create a social club. As the idea evolved, these founders determined that their club's main mission would be to recognize the academic excellence of young African American women of Denver's Five Points, Whittier, and Park Hill neighborhoods. They were all a bunch of night owls, so the group decided that the Owl Club would be the only appropriate name. Since receiving its state charter on March 24, 1949 as a nonprofit organization, the Owl Club has presented approximately 1600 and counting. Young African American women as debutantes of Denver. The first presentation and Debutante Ball took place in 1951, debuting 10 young women from East Emmanuel High School. The following year, Owette Ernestine Smith, wife of Owl George W. Smith Jr., choreographed the Owl Club's signature dance, Waltz of the Bells, one of the many traditions of the Cotillion. In 1960, the founding members took the money they collected, some from all those cardplaying nights, and purchased the current Owl Club house, located at 2815 Madison Street. Class, elegance, grace, poise, and beauty, define debutante and cotilian culture. In European and Western culture, the presentation and ball, otherwise known as the Cotilian, represents the social debut of young women who were eligible for marriage and their introduction to high society. Debutante culture came to the United States early in the nation's history, with the first African American debutante announcement appearing in New York newspapers in 1778. Known at the time as the Ethiopian Ball, the wives of free black men serving in the Royal Ethiopian Regiment mingled with the wives of other British officers, representing one of the few avenues of interracial social interaction available at the time. Debutante clubs maintained their importance throughout American history, and in African American communities, they became spaces created to defy stereotypes placed on black people and their culture. African American debutants, rather than preparing women for marriage or acceptance into high society. We're prepped in professional development, networking, and getting accustomed to being in spaces outside of their protected and familiar communities. The balls strove to showcase women who defined varying standards of beauty, academic achievement, and the continuation of education beyond high school. Their history shows us the presence of fathers, uncles, brothers, and other male role models, and debunks the misconception that black men are not present in their families' day-to-day lives. The Owl Club of Denver is part of this long tradition and is the oldest practicing African American debutante organization in the city. They have redefined the meaning of a debutante and helped create representations of beauty, academic achievement, and acceptance for a community that's often been misrepresented and forgotten. Owl Club members have actively supported thousands of members beyond their debutante presentations. In 1964 and 1965, for example, former Owl Club member Omar Blair formed the Owl Club Youth Incentive Athletic and Scholarship Association. This initiative was intended to help youth in East Denver hone their football skills for high school games. The committee was able to bring the NBA to play two preseason games in the Mile High City before Denver joined the association. The proceeds from the event financed the Owl's Little League football team. In 1979, member William Kirk founded the Owl Club Scholarship Fund, which was later chartered in 1994 by members Skip Riley and Penfield Tate III, now chair of History Colorado's Board of Directors. The donated funds provided academic scholarships to the young ladies who became debutants. During the COVID-19 pandemic, 31 debutants were honored virtually for the 69th and 70th presentations. Beyond their impact in Denver, Owl Club members and debutantes have gone on to achieve great things. Famed Tuskegee Airman Captain and World War II veteran Omar Blair was very active in the community after moving to Denver in 1951. In 1968, he served as commissioner of the Denver Urban Renewal Authority and helped initiate the 16th Street Mall Project. In 1972, he was elected as the first African American president of the Denver Board of Education. During his two-term post, he fought to desegregate schools and organized bussing initiatives to ensure that all students had access to resources, textbooks, and learning environments. Elvin Caldwell, also a World War II veteran and OWL Club member, fought for many of the same causes as his good friend Omar Blair. Widely respected and one of the most significant African American policymakers in Colorado history, Caldwell accomplished a lot during the Civil Rights Movement. From 1950 to 1955, he was elected to the Colorado House of Representatives and served in the state legislature. In 1952, he was also a delegate to the Democratic National Convention. In 1955, he was elected to the Denver City Council and became the first African American man to serve in a seat west of the Mississippi. Of his seven terms served, five of them were as president of the council. Under his leadership, Caldwell was able to fund the Skyline Urban Renewal Project, the Denver General Hospital Facility, now Denver Health, and oversee the implementation of Colorado's First Fair Employment Practices Act. In 2003, the Blair Caldwell African American Research Library was named in honor of the duo's work and commitment to African American communities in Denver. OWL Club member Charles C.T. Smith would go on to join the Denver Police Department in 1959, where he would become the fourth African American Division Chief in DPD history. In his service of 36 years, Smith would connect with prominent African American leaders such as Martin Luther King Jr. And created Denver's Crime Stoppers Program. His initiatives were aimed at making Denver safer and aid in crime prevention. Condoleza Rice, a 1971 Owl Club debutante, fit the Owl Club's debutante image from an early age. Noted as a child prodigy, Condoleezza Rice took an interest in music and was able to read sheet music before learning to read words. Her intellect was apparent as she carried on through her education, where her first major accomplishment was graduating high school at the age of 16. She initially enrolled in college as a music major with hopes of becoming a concert pianist, but changed course after taking a class on international politics. At the age of 19, she graduated cum laud from the University of Denver with a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science. By 26, Dr. Rice held a PhD in political science, also from the University of Denver. She went on to be a political science professor at Stanford University and would later become the first woman, the youngest, and the first African American provost in the university's history. During her political career, Condoleezza Rice would become the first female African American Secretary of State, first woman to serve as National Security Advisor. In 2022, Condoleez Rice became a part owner of the Denver Broncos, becoming one of the very small percentage of non white owners within the National Football League. In a 2023 oral history now housed at History Colorado, current Owl Club members Alonzo E. Butler, Robert B. Pratt III, Maurice Goodgain, Darius Newman, Maurice Dismooks, Jeffrey T. Smith, Theron G. Labry, Marvin Pierce, Ronald Washington, Skip Riley, and Charles T. Smith recalled that the organization's significance comes from its mission to foster community development, create professional connections, and provide mentors are the elements that make the Owl Club so critical to Denver's history. Founded in a time when African Americans were constantly seeking safe spaces to belong and celebrate one another, member Maurice Goodgain is proud of the organization's quote, dedication to excellence, end quote, and a life lived without barriers. Today, the Owl Club continues to uplift the African American community through its twin missions of fostering academic excellence and social and civic engagement.
Sam Bock [00:09:24] Thanks for listening to the Colorado Magazine Podcast from History Colorado. To read more articles, subscribe, or see some of the photos from these articles, visit us online at HistoryColorado dot org slash publications.































































