Wednesday 10 February 2016

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY - AFRICAN AMERICAN " LINDA BROWN " WAS THE CHILD ASSOCIATED WITH THE LEAD NAME IN THE LAND MARK CASE BROWN V BOARD OF EDUCATION, WHICH OUT LAW SEGREGATION IN U.S. SCHOOL IN 1954 - GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK HEROES "

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Linda Brown Biography
Civil Rights Activist (1942–)


NAME
Linda Brown
OCCUPATION
Civil Rights Activist
BIRTH DATE
February 20, 1942 (age 73)
EDUCATION
Kansas State University, Washburn University
PLACE OF BIRTH
Topeka, Kansas
AKA
Linda Brown Smith
Linda Brown Thompson
Linda Brown
ZODIAC SIGN
Pisces
SYNOPSIS
EARLY LIFE AND HISTORIC CASE
WINNING 'BROWN V. BOARD OF EDUCATION'
LIFE AFTER HISTORIC CASE
CITE THIS PAGE
Linda Brown was the child associated with the lead name in the landmark case Brown v. Board of Education, which led to the outlawing of U.S. school segregation in 1954.
IN THESE GROUPS

FAMOUS KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY ALUMNI
FEMALE ACTIVISTS
FAMOUS FEMALE CIVIL RIGHTS ACTIVISTS
FAMOUS PEOPLE BORN IN UNITED STATES
Show All Groups
1 of 3  «  »
QUOTES
“My father pondered, 'Why? Why should my child walk four miles when there is a school only four blocks away?'”
—Linda Brown
Synopsis

Linda Brown was born on February 20, 1942, in Topeka, Kansas. Because she was forced to travel a significant distance to elementary school due to racial segregation, her father was one of the plaintiffs in the case of Brown v. Board of Education, with the Supreme Court ruling in 1954 that school segregation was unlawful. Brown has lived in Topeka as an adult, raising a family and continuing her desegregation efforts with the area's school system.

Early Life and Historic Case

Linda Brown was born on February 20, 1942, in Topeka, Kansas, to Leola and Oliver Brown. Though she and her two younger sisters grew up in an ethnically diverse neighborhood, Linda was forced to walk across railroad tracks and take a bus to grade school despite there being a school four blocks away from her home. This was due to the elementary schools in Topeka being racially segregated, with separate facilities for black and white children.

In 1950, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People asked a group of African-American parents that included Oliver Brown to attempt to enroll their children in all-white schools, with the expectation that they would be turned away. Oliver attempted to do so with Linda, who was in third grade at the time and barred from enrollment at Sumner Elementary. The strategy was for the civil rights group to file a lawsuit on behalf of the 13 families, who represented different states.

With Brown's name happening to alphabetically top the list of plaintiffs, the case would come to be known as Brown v. Board of Education and be taken to the Supreme Court. The lead attorney working on behalf of the plaintiffs was future Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall.

Winning 'Brown v. Board of Education'

An aim of the case was to bring down the precedent set up by the 1896 decision of Plessy v. Ferguson, which sanctioned the idea of "separate but equal" facilities for racial divisions. In 1954, this aim was achieved when the Supreme Court unanimously ruled in favor of the plaintiffs in Brown v. Board of Education, disavowing the notion of "separate but equal" and concluding that segregated facilities deprived African-American children of a richer, fairer educational experience.

Life After Historic Case

By the time of the ruling, Linda Brown was in junior high, a grade level that had been integrated before the 1954 court ruling. The family moved to Springfield, Missouri, in 1959. Oliver Brown died two years later, and his widow moved the girls back to Topeka. Linda Brown went on to attend Washburn and Kansas State universities and had a family. She went through a divorce and later became a widow after her second husband's death. She wed William Thompson in the mid-1990s and has had children and grandchildren. She has also worked on the speaker circuit and as an educational consultant.

By the late 1970s, Brown spoke of feeling exploited by the amount of media attention given to the case, with there being limited awareness that she's a human being as opposed to a lofty historical figure. Nonetheless, she has continued to speak out on segregation and reopened the Topeka case with the American Civil Liberties Union in 1979, arguing that the district's schools still weren't desegregated. It was eventually ruled by the Court of Appeals in 1993 that the school system was indeed still racially divided, and three new schools were built as part of integration efforts.

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