Ruby Bridges Biography

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Ruby Bridges was born in Mississippi in 1954, the oldest child of Abon and Lucille Bridges. In 1954 the United States handed down their decision ordering the integration of public schools (Hall). She lived in the country and enjoyed life as it was there; when her parents heard that there were better opportunities in the city they moved to New Orleans. Her father found work as a service station attendant and her mother took night jobs to support their growing family.
Under federal court order, New Orleans public schools were finally forced to desegregate. (Ruby Bridges) In the spring of 1960 she took a test, along with other black kindergarteners in the city, to see who would go to an integrated school come September. That summer Ruby’s parents learned that she passed the test and had been selected to start first grade at William Frantz Public School.
Her mother was all for it. Her father, on the other hand, wasn't. "We're just asking for trouble," he said. He thought things weren't going to change, and blacks and whites would never be treated as equals. Her thought she would have an opportunity to get a better education if she went to the new school - and a chance for a good job later in life. Her parents argued about it and prayed about it. Eventually her mother convinced her father that despite the risks, they had to take this step forward, not just for their own children, but for all black children.
A federal judge stated that Monday, November 14, 1960 would be the day black children in New Orleans would go to school with white children. There were six black children chosen to integrate the city's public school system. Two of them decided to stay in their old schools, but other three were assigned to McDonough. Ruby ...

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...ing it, I had picked up her Boston accent.”
Neither of them missed a single day of school that year. The crowd outside dwindled to just a few protestors, and before she knew it, it was June. For Ruby, first grade ended much more quietly than it began. Ruby said good-bye to Mrs. Henry, fully expecting her to be my teacher again in the fall. But when she went back to school in September, everything was different. There were no marshals, no protestors. There were other kids - even some other black students - in her second-grade class. And Mrs. Henry was gone. She was devastated. Years later she found out she had not been invited to return to William Frantz, and she and her husband had moved back to Boston. It was almost as if that first year of school integration had never happened. No one talked about it. Everyone seemed to have put that difficult time behind them.

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