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Topeka's Black History Driving Tour
Item 10 of 14

This was the location of the home of Nicholas Chiles while he lived in Topeka. Chiles was an important figure in the early Civil Right's Movement as he worked to get the Catholic church involved in creating a better future for African Americans. As an influential voice on the place of black people in the Midwest at the turn of the 20th century, Chiles helped to found the Western Negro Publishers Association in 1896. Famously, he sent a letter to the Pope urging him to speak out on the treatment of African Americans in the US. He would live in the Topeka for much of his life after moving there in 1886.


Chiles Buildings in Downtown Topeka

Building, Sky, Window, Facade

Nicholas Chiles was born in Cross Roads, South Carolina, to Moses and Winnie Chiles. There he attended school and sold newspapers, developing an interest in the industry. He studied law with a prominent Southern judge and then lived briefly in Chicago.

Chiles moved to Topeka in 1886. There he worked in the grocery, restaurant, and hotel businesses. Joseph Bass and Will Pope sold him a newspaper they had founded, the Topeka Call. He renamed the newspaper and in January 1899 published the first issue of the Topeka Plaindealer He served as editor and publisher for the rest of his life.

Chiles developed a reputation for his timely and thought-provoking editorials on subjects of concern to African Americans in Topeka, around Kansas, and beyond the state's borders. A savvy businessman, Chiles grew the Plaindealer to be the most successful Black newspaper in Kansas. It was among the strongest Black newspapers in the nation and the longest-running.

He was also a member of the Topeka Chapter of the AME Church starting in 1910. Chiles was defeated in his bid for Senator against Charles Curtis.

Accessed May 7th, 2023. https://www.kshs.org/kansapedia/nick-chiles/12009.