Thursday, 28 May 2015

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRICAN AMERICAN " MAE BERTHA CARTER " WAS A FIGURE OF THE 20th CENTURY AFRICAN AMERICAN CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT FIGURE FROM DYEW, MISSISSIPPI : GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BACK HEROES "

          BLACK    SOCIAL    HISTORY                                                                                                                                                                                                  








































































Mae Bertha Carter


Mae Bertha Carter (January 13, 1923-April 28, 1999) was a figure of the 20th century African-American Civil Rights Movement figure from Drew, Mississippi.[1]
Carter was born on January 13, 1923 in Sunflower County, Mississippi. She enrolled 7 of her 13 children in schools previously reserved for Whites in the northern hemisphere fall of 1965. She continued to keep her children in the schools even though an entity fired bullets into their house, and even though her landlord evicted her and her family. Carter and Marian Wright Edelman, a lawyer who worked for the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund Inc., sued the Drew School District to challenge the Mississippi "freedom of choice" law. In 1969 the plaintiffs won the suit.[2] In 1969 a court order ended the segregation system in the Drew School District. All seven of her children graduated from the previously all-White Drew High School.[3] She died in her home in Drew on April 28, 1999.[2]

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