New Orleans marked the 64th anniversary of the day four Black 6-year-old girls integrated New Orleans schools with a parade — ...
Today is Ruby Bridges Walk to School Day, which commemorates when 6-year-old Ruby Bridges integrated a New Orleans School in ...
On Nov. 14, 1960, Ruby Bridges became one of the first Black students to integrate a school in the South. At six years old, she walked into William Frantz Elementary School in New Orleans escorted ...
On the morning of November 14, 1960, 6-year-old Ruby Bridges, wearing pigtails, bobby socks and black Mary Jane shoes ascended the steps of her new school, becoming the first African ...
Ruby Bridges is an iconic figure in the history of civil rights in America. Born on September 8, 1954, in Tylertown, ...
THREE SIX YEAR OLDS STARTED AT MCDONOGH 19, WHILE ANOTHER, RUBY BRIDGES, STARTED OVER AT WILLIAM FRANCE. THEY WOULD ... rights parade rolled through New Orleans Thursday, honoring the four women ...
Sixty-four years ago next month, U.S. Marshals accompanied Ruby Bridges ... accompanied Bridges and her mother on Nov. 14, 1960, as they entered New Orleans' William Frantz Elementary School ...
WEST LONG BRANCH - Nearly 70 years following the desegregation of the public school system, Ruby ... to New Orleans, where on Nov. 14, 1960, Bridges began attending William Frantz Elementary ...
Sixty-four years ago this November, public schools in New Orleans began to ... the McDonogh 19 School. Ruby Bridges was assigned to the previously all-white William Frantz Public School.
A 1912 photo of Brokaw Eden Washing Machine Co. captures its early Alton operations before relocating to New Jersey in 1922.