FROM NOW ON, ONCE IN A WHILE I WILL SHARE WHAT SOME PEOPLE HAS DONE FOR THIS COUNTRY, NO MATTER COLOR OR RACE. THIS COUNTRY HAS BEEN MADE AND STILL BEING MADE BY WONDERFUL PEOPLE FROM SO MANY RACES AND COLORS. HARD WORKING PEOPLE, PEOPLE WITH A LOT OF LOVE IN THEIR HEART, VERY SMART PEOPLE, PEOPLE THAT HAS SAID "NO TO RACISM AND STEREOTYPES".
HERE IS THE FIRST ONE OF SO MANY:
Before Rosa Parks, before the Little Rock Nine, even before Martin Luther King, Jr. embraced nonviolent protest as a means to bring about social change, sixteen-year-old Barbara Rose Johns led her classmates in a strike to protest unfair conditions of her high school. The conditions in her high school were deplorable. To house the overflow of students, tar paper shacks were used as classrooms. The shacks leaked in the rain and were heated by pot-bellied stoves. The all-white high school across town was much better maintained.
Fed up with the situation, Barbara devised a plan. On April 23, 1951, Barbara led her classmates in a strike. Her strike eventually turned into a lawsuit against the county, and became part of the landmark Supreme Court decision, Brown v. Board of Education, the case which desegregated schools in the United States.
Quotations about Barbara
From Taylor Branch, Pulitzer-Prize winning author of Parting the Waters: America in the King Years, 1954-63, Barbara's contribution to the Civil Rights movement has been largely overlooked because she was a teenager:
". . the schoolchild origins of the lawsuit were lost as well on nearly [everyone] outside Prince Edward County. ... The idea that non-adults of any race might play a leading role in political events had simply failed to register on anyone — except perhaps the Klansmen who burned a cross in the Johns' yard one night, and even then people thought their target might not have been Barbara but her notorious firebrand uncle."
(Note that Taylor Branch got a few details wrong. Barbara's family home was burned to the ground. The cross was burned on the school grounds of the Robert Moton High School.)
From Christopher B. Howard, President of Hampden-Sydney College:
"When Barbara Johns and her fellow Moton High School students challenged the deplorable and unequal conditions they daily confronted in their school in April, 1951, they set in motion a remarkable chain of events that culminated in the end of racial segregation in America."
General Mark Earley, Attorney General, Virginia:
"In a very real way, and in a way that is not an exaggeration, the Civil Rights Movement was born on a spring day in Prince Edward County at Moton High School."
From Ruth Murphy, President, Fuqua School, Farmville, Virginia
"There are few historical events that have helped shape American culture more than the 1951 student walkout in Prince Edward County. In teaching the history of this event to our students, Fuqua School focuses on four lessons we believe are central to the event itself and to our subsequent collective experience: change can be brought about through focused, deliberate action, event through the action of young people; idealism energy, passion and commitment are qualities that empower leaders; institutional change, while complex, is possible; dialogue opens doors to understanding that can bring people together.
From Patrick Finnegan, President, Longwood University, Farmville, Virginia
"The Moton students of 1951 epitomize citizen leaders and serve as shining examples to our students of how ordinary citizens have the power to create extraordinary change in our democracy."
Brief Biography
Barbara was born in Harlem, in New York City, on March 6, 1935. Her parents, Robert and Adele Johns, were natives of Prince Edward County, Virginia. They had come to New York looking for work. When World War II came, and Barbara's father went into the army, her mother took Barbara and her siblings back to Virginia to live on her grandmother's farm. Barbara spent most of her youth living and working on a small tobacco farm.
Pulitzer Prize-Winning Author Richard Kluger says this about Barbara's "unheralded emergence" as a leader of the black people in Prince Edward County, Virginia in 1951:
"The blacks [in Prince Edward County] made up a bit more than half the population, but their hopes for obtaining justice from the whites remained nearly as slender and muted as those of their ancestors in bondage a century before. At the time of the events she inspired, this leader was sixteen years old and her beauty was apparent to every eye. She did not claim, as Joan of Ark had, to be inspired by celestial voices. But some pious ones who knew her family well suggest that a messenger of the Lord, in the person of her uncle, who was a man of the cloth, helped inspire her unheralded emergence as a leader of the blacks of Prince Edward County. Her grandmother's second husband, for one, disagrees with that view. He saw her growing up, and he says, 'She had that grit in her herself.'"
Fed up with the deplorable conditions of her segregated high school, Barbara led her classmates in a strike which became a lawsuit against Prince Edward County, and later went to the United States Supreme Court as part of the landmark Brown v. Board of Education, the decision which outlawed segregation in schools in the United States.
When a threat was made against Barbara's life, her parents sent her to Montgomery, Alabama for safety, where she lived with her uncle and finished her education. After high school, she attended Spellman College and later Drexel University in Philadelphia.
She married Reverend Powell, raised five children, and worked as a librarian in the Philadelphia school district for 24 years. She died in 1991 in Philadelphia.
TAKEN FROM: http://www.barbararosejohns.com/index.html
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