West Omaha has its fair share of classic watering holes. One of them is the Office West Lounge, whose history dates back much further than I anticipated.

Before it was Office West, it was The Office Bar downtown. The bar was opened by Merle Fimple in 1950. Merle’s days in the bar business go back to 1934, when he received just the 13th liquor license issued by the State of Nebraska after Prohibition was repealed.

1965 Durham Museum photo of the Pine Board Lounge at 18th and Dodge Streets in the Elks Club Building.

The president of Cornhusker Liquor opened his first bar, the Pine Board Lounge, in the Elks Club Building at 18th and Dodge Streets. Its name was inspired by the use of pine lumber, which he used to create shelves and a bar held up by two sawhorses. After a few months of earnings, he completed the aesthetic by lining the interior walls with pine paneling. Without chairs in those early days, customers sat on the cases left behind whenever a brewery made a delivery.

1957 Durham Museum photo of The Office Bar on 19th between Farnam and Douglas Streets. The Office Bar was the predecessor to Office West Lounge.

Merle’s first bar did so well that he opened a second one in the nearby Lyric Building at 213 S. 19th Street in 1950. The name of this bar was the result of a contest that yielded more than 1,400 entries. Of the three finalists, which included Tag Inn and The Chop, the winner was The Office. The winning name was determined by applause measured by a device provided by radio station KOIL. The winners received 64 silver dollars, which they split among the six of them.

The Office featured a “sandwich bar” during lunch that proved popular with nearby office workers. Merle’s policy of earning no profits on lunches from 10:30 to 2:30 must have been offset by those three-martini lunches. The bar’s slogan was, “It Pays to Come to The Office Early.” From about 1955 until it closed in 1970, Leonard “Whitey” Knutson operated the bar. He was assisted by his partner, Kenneth “Shorty” Benham, until his untimely passing in 1965.

1956 Durham Museum photo of the old City Hall at 18th and Farnam Street. The building was razed to make way for the Woodmen Tower. Afterwards, City Hall offices moved to the Elks Club Building where Pine Board Lounge was located.

With the closure of The Office, Whitey took over Merle’s original bar, the Pine Board Lounge, which in 1966 had the distinction of being one of very few, if not the only bar, to operate within a city hall. This occurred after Omaha sold its old city hall, known as the Red Castle, to Woodmen Life in order to build its tower. The city then relocated its interim city hall to the Elks Club Building, which was home to the lounge. They coexisted until 1975.

1967 Durham Museum photo of the Pine Board Lounge. Notice the Interim City Hall sign at the Elks Club Building.

Whitey opted to relocate his bar to West Omaha after the city moved its offices to the city-county building. He found a home for his new bar in the Boardwalk Shopping Center at 119th and Pacific Streets. He took the opportunity to revive The Office name by calling the new establishment Office West. Located at 1266 S. 119th Court, the decor matched that of the downtown bar. With a capacity of 85, it was popular for its singalong piano.

1975 Omaha World-Herald advertisement announcing The Office Bar relocating to 119th and Pacific.


After Whitey passed away in 1979, the bar appears to have relocated to northwest Omaha near 108th and Maple Street. By that time, it appears that Clyde Pittman owned Office West when it moved to 2946 N. 108th Street in a space currently occupied by Moe & Curly’s Pub & Grill. Meanwhile, the former Boardwalk location became home first to Sedsel’s Lounge and later Sparky’s Lounge.

January 2026 photo of the Office West Lounge in the lower level of the Boardwalk Shopping Center at 119th and Pacific Streets.

Office West made a surprising return to 119th and Pacific in 1993 and by 1996 was owned by Gene Fisher and his wife, Patty Ferguson, who also owns Clancy’s Pub. While Gene passed away in 2018, his legacy lives on through Office West and its event space, The Jack Room. Popular for its St. Patrick’s Day celebration, the bar today is equipped with pool tables, dart boards, and televisions. Rather than being a lunchtime hangout as it was in the 1950s, its focus now is happy hour and beyond, with the slogan, “Another late night at The Office.”

Google Earth view of Office West Lounge looking west from about 119th and Pacific St.

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More pictures

January 2026 photo of the Boardwalk Shopping Center from 120th south of Pacific Street. The Office West Lounge sign can be seen from atop of the building with an arrow pointing down to the second level.
January 2026 photo of the entrance to the Office West Lounge.
January 2026 photo of the patio and entrance to the Jack Daniels Room at Office West Lounge.
1965 Durham Museum photo of the Pine Board Lounge at 18th and Dodge Streets in the Elks Club Building.
2025 St. Patrick’s Day photo of Office West Lounge. Photo courtesy of Office West.
2021 St. Patrick’s Day photo of Office West Lounge. Photo courtesy of Office West.
1955 Omaha World-Herald advertisement for The Office Bar with its new owners.
1935 Omaha World-Herald advertisement for the Pine Board Liquor Store later known as the Pine Board Lounge.

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3 responses to “Merle Fimple’s Pine Board Lounge, Office Bar and Office West Lounge”

  1. timetravelquickly08b320e38f Avatar
    timetravelquickly08b320e38f

    Great story. I and other Northwestern Bell people were regulars at Whitey’s Pine Board. The Friday night of the 1975 blizzard, downtown was at a standstill and all hotel rooms were full, so mayor Zorinski at the time allowed all bars to stay open all night since people had nowhere to go. A Bell associate and I ran the bar that Friday night while Whitey got some sleep upstairs. Restaurant staff couldn’t get to work and some of the Bell ladies (including my wife) went to Top of the World on top of the Woodman Tower for dinner and ended up being servers and bus staff for the night until they ran out of food. My wife and I finally got home Sunday afternoon.

    I have one distinct correction for your story though. Shorty passed in 1965, but it was Whitey who passed in 1979 (paragraph #8 of your story).

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    1. What a fantastic story! I wish I could have used experienced that.

      I corrected the typo, thanks for pointing that out.

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      1. timetravelquickly08b320e38f Avatar
        timetravelquickly08b320e38f

        Weather forecasters called for ‘flurries’ that day. When snowfall was obviously going to exceed 8-10 inches and result in dire road conditions (around 10am) many businesses allowed their people to leave early, while others booked hotel rooms. Waiting to make that decision until around noon ultimately turned became a disaster with the Interstate and most city streets becoming impassable. OWH archives have several pictures of stuck and abandoned vehicles on both city streets and interstate making it impossible for snowplow. One in particular was from 72nd St at the Ranch Bowl (72nd and Hickory) looking north. The city plows pushed snow on downtown Dodge Street from the curbs to piles in the center of the street with plans for frontloaders and dump trucks to eliminate it. By 4pm, the Dodge street pile in front of the Pineboard was over 10 feet high and we were stuck downtown until Sunday. Then in September we experienced the tornado.

        William Sullivan, sully4@cox.net, 402-290-9401

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