For nearly a century, the endangered building located at the southwest corner of 20th and S Streets in the Brown Park neighborhood was home to three different Bohemian businesses.

1918 Durham Museum photo of the Brown Park neighborhood. This photo is looking south from around 17th and S Streets. I believe the building with the red arrow is Pleskac Bakery.

While it’s most widely recognized as being home to the beloved Pleskac Bakery, the building at 2001 S Street was first home to John Franek’s Saloon. Born in Bohemia, Franek immigrated to the United States and built a small corner store around 1896. Also known as Franek’s Hall, the establishment was robbed three times within a year, prompting the family to install a burglar alarm. After it was triggered in 1911, Franek and his son exchanged gunfire with the would-be robbers, causing one to be killed while the other was wounded. While the Franek’s moved from this building around 1914, the bar remained open elsewhere through at least the 1950s.

2026 OE photo of the north side of the former Pleskac Bakery.

In addition to operating the saloon, Franek worked as a musician and band leader in addition to leading the labor union and serving on the South Omaha City Council. He passed away in 1922, though his bar remained open through at least the 1950s. Up next was Frank Vanicek who also operated a bar from this building until prohibition went into effect in Nebraska in 1917. By that time, he transitioned to a soft drink parlor before moving his business elsewhere. He later opened a confectionery business before passing away at just 48 years old in 1928.

2026 OE photo of the front of the former Pleskac Bakery.

Joseph Pleskac was trained as a baker in his native country. He immigrated to the United States in 1910 where he found work at Welch’s Bakery. Soon afterwards, he opened his own bakery at 20th and Q Streets, but by 1919 he relocated to the one-story corner store that John Franek had built.

2026 OE photo of the Pleskac Bakery signage on the north side of the building.

Pleskac Bakery would go on to become a South Omaha institution during its 65-year run serving the community that surrounded it. Perhaps the most notable feature of the bakery is its Deco Moderne storefront that was likely added in the 1930s when the government promoted such updates as a way to help stimulate the economy during the Great Depression. These types of storefronts emphasized sleek design and featured curved glass and smooth surfaces while utilizing aluminum, glass block, and marble.

2026 OE photo of the corner entrance to the former Pleskac Bakery.

After its founder passed away in 1949, Anna, the matriarch of the Pleskac family, continued to run the bakery alongside her children George and Helen in addition to son-in-law James Zitka. The baking duties fell to George and James while Helen worked out front on the retail side of the business.

2026 OE photo of the east side of the former Pleskac Bakery.

Despite suffering Anna’s death in 1963, the bakery continued and remained as popular as ever due to their insistence on using the same recipes and methods their father had learned in the old country. In an interview with the South Omaha Sun, George suggested that theirs may have been the only bakery in town still using an old-fashioned hearth oven. George went on to say that it offered no temperature control and, as a result, there was zero margin for error. He was so experienced by that point that he knew exactly how long each item needed to bake.

2019 Google Maps street view image of the Pleskac Bakery covered in ivy during the warm months.

According to the Omaha World-Herald, Omaha had as many as 20 Czech bakeries at one time but that number dropped to just two by the early 1980s. The other, Masek Bakery at 1627 S 13th Street in Little Bohemia, closed in 1982, followed by Pleskac Bakery in 1984. While Pleskac has been closed for more than 40 years, its memory lives on for those that remember its Bohemian rye bread, breakfast rolls, drop cookies, and kolaches.

Google Earth view of the former Pleskac Bakery building at 20th and S Streets.

While the building has been utilized as storage in recent years, it has deteriorated and may be at-risk. For now, it is one of the last intact Deco Moderne storefronts remaining in the city.

This is the third article in a series featuring endangered buildings. This series is in collaboration with Preserve Omaha.

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Read OE on Grow Omaha: Local History by Omaha Exploration | Grow Omaha

More pictures

1918 Durham Museum photo of the Brown Park neighborhood. This photo is looking south from around 17th and S Streets. The large building on the far left is the old Brown Park School.

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