Linda Brown, became one of the most famous symbols of the 20th century civil rights movement when she was denied registration at the all-white school just a few blocks from her home in 1950, has passed away at the age of 76.
Her parents weren't unhappy with the black school she attended, but were concerned for the long distance Linda had to travel. Over train tracks, a busy road and then a bus ride each day to get to school. And then, the winter would come.
Her father became angry when they were turned away, and thus began a series of events that would result in a historic ruling at the U.S. Supreme Court.
In the desegregation case Brown v. Board of Education, all nine white male justices would rule that "separate but equal" was not and never would be equal.
The 1954 ruling changes decades of educational practices, and still reverberates in schools today.
Even after the ruling, it took three years for black students to enroll in an Arkansas high school. And it was only with a contingent of federal guards that those nine students were able to walk onto the school campus.
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