Current:Home > MyNew Orleans marks with parade the 64th anniversary of 4 little girls integrating city schools -Secure Growth Academy
New Orleans marks with parade the 64th anniversary of 4 little girls integrating city schools
View
Date:2025-04-22 00:15:13
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — New Orleans marked the 64th anniversary of the day four Black 6-year-old girls integrated New Orleans schools with a parade — a celebration in stark contrast to the tensions and anger that roiled the city on Nov. 14, 1960.
Federal marshals were needed then to escort Tessie Prevost Williams, Leona Tate, Gail Etienne and Ruby Bridges to school while white mobs opposing desegregation shouted, cursed and threw rocks. Williams, who died in July, walked into McDonogh No. 19 Elementary School that day with Tate and Etienne. Bridges — perhaps the best known of the four, thanks to a Norman Rockwell painting of the scene — braved the abuse to integrate William Frantz Elementary.
The women now are often referred to as the New Orleans Four.
“I call them America’s little soldier girls,” said Diedra Meredith of the New Orleans Legacy Project, the organization behind the event. “They were civil rights pioneers at 6 years old.”
“I was wondering why they were so angry with me,” Etienne recalled Thursday. “I was just going to school and I felt like if they could get to me they’d want to kill me — and I definitely didn’t know why at 6 years old.”
Marching bands in the city’s Central Business District prompted workers and customers to walk out of one local restaurant to see what was going on. Tourists were caught by surprise, too.
“We were thrilled to come upon it,” said Sandy Waugh, a visitor from Chestertown, Maryland. “It’s so New Orleans.”
Rosie Bell, a social worker from Toronto, Ontario, Canada, said the parade was a “cherry on top” that she wasn’t expecting Thursday morning.
“I got so lucky to see this,” Bell said.
For Etienne, the parade was her latest chance to celebrate an achievement she couldn’t fully appreciate when she was a child.
“What we did opened doors for other people, you know for other students, for other Black students,” she said. “I didn’t realize it at the time but as I got older I realized that. ... They said that we rocked the nation for what we had done, you know? And I like hearing when they say that.”
___
Associated Press reporter Kevin McGill contributed to this story.
veryGood! (141)
Related
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Black Friday food: How to get discounts on coffee, ice cream, gift cards, more
- A Mom's Suicide After Abuse Accusations: The Heartbreaking Story Behind Take Care of Maya
- The Excerpt podcast: Cease-fire between Hamas and Israel begins, plus more top stories
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- ‘Adopt an axolotl’ campaign launches in Mexico to save iconic species from pollution and trout
- Mississippi keeps New Year's Six hopes alive with Egg Bowl win vs. Mississippi State
- Papa John's to pay $175,000 to settle discrimination claim from blind former worker
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- Let's be real. Gifts are all that matter this holiday season.
Ranking
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Why 'Monarch' Godzilla show was a 'strange new experience' for Kurt and Wyatt Russell
- Garth Brooks: Life's better with music in it
- 5 family members and a commercial fisherman neighbor are ID’d as dead or missing in Alaska landslide
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- At least 10 Thai hostages released by Hamas
- Several U.S. service members injured in missile attack at Al-Asad Airbase in Iraq, Pentagon says
- Pakistani shopping mall blaze kills at least 10 people and injures more than 20
Recommendation
Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
The second installment of Sri Lanka’s bailout was delayed. The country hopes it’s coming in December
Jets vs. Dolphins winners and losers: Tyreek Hill a big winner after Week 12 win
Small Business Saturday: Why is it becoming more popular than Black Friday?
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
New Zealand’s new government promises tax cuts, more police and less bureaucracy
Family lunch, some shopping, a Christmas tree lighting: President Joe Biden’s day out in Nantucket
Black Friday and Beyond