“I have a Dream” “I have a Dream” “I have a Dream”
Ruby Bridges played an important part in the Civil Rights
Movement. Ruby was born September 8, 1954 in Tylertown , Mississippi .
A year later, her family moved to New
Orleans , Louisiana .
At that time, people wanted to keep blacks and whites separate because whites
didn’t think that blacks were as good as them. For example, blacks and whites
had separate drinking fountains, blacks had to sit in the back of buses, and
blacks and whites each had their own separate schools.
Ruby was a little girl who was one of the first blacks to go
to an all white school. Her dad didn’t want her to go to the all-white William Frantz School .
He didn’t want any part of the school mixing whites and blacks. He feared that
angry people, who wanted to keep blacks and whites separate, would hurt his
family if Ruby went to the all-white school.
Ruby’s mom wanted her to go to the all-white school because
she wanted her child to have a better education than she did and to have a good
job when she grew up. Her mom had such a tough time in her life that she wanted
Ruby to have an easier life. Ruby’s mom had to work hard even when she was
pregnant. The day before Ruby was born; her mom had to carry ninety pounds of
cotton on her back. She knew that if her child went to William Frantz
School , Ruby would have a
better life.
White people didn’t want blacks going to their schools
because they thought blacks should not be treated as equals. They didn’t want
blacks to have it as good as whites because they were a different color. Some
white people threatened to poison Ruby and hurt her if she went to their
school. Her dad even lost his job because his boss didn’t think that someone
should be working for him if his black child was going to an all-white school.
Ruby’s mom got her six year-old Ruby into the all-white William Frantz School
because Ruby passed a very hard test. When Ruby started first grade, U.S.
marshals took her to and from school and protected her from the angry white
people. On the first day of school in 1960, Ruby and her mom sat in the office.
Some adults took their children to school but most others did not. Ruby saw
some people dragging their white kids out of the classrooms because they didn’t
want their kids going to the same school as a black kid. Ruby and her mom
stayed in the office for the whole day of school. Many of the white parents and
their kids were outside the school protesting. They were yelling and holding
signs. The teachers still tried to teach the few students at school that day.
The second day Ruby, her mom, and her teacher sat in the classroom. No white parents would allow their children to be in the same classroom with Ruby. Her teacher, Mrs. Henry, started to teach and was very loving toward Ruby. She supported and helped Ruby through the difficult time. On the third day of school, her mom didn’t go with her. For the rest of the year, she was the only one in her class and she was taught on a whole different floor from all the other kids. The principal and many teachers also didn’t think Ruby should be taught with the white children. At first this didn’t bother Ruby, but after a while she wondered why she couldn’t be with the other children.
Handling the Pressure
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Image
of Problem We All Live With by Norman Rockwell at
biggallery.com/art/byimg/A0A5T000.htm, Hutchinson Turner,
staff@biggallery.com, March 2000. Email message.
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After
winter break, Ruby started to see a child psychiatrist. His name was Dr. Coles.
Dr. Coles got interested in Ruby by seeing her go into school with the marshals
surrounding her. He wondered how she could handle all of the pressure and
wanted to help her. He was very supportive of Ruby. He thought it would be
better for her to have someone outside of her family to talk to. She felt
special because an important man was coming to visit her. His wife came, too,
and she was a very caring person. She became good friends with Ruby’s mother.
After
many years, Ruby graduated and became a travel agent. She was one of the first
black Americans to go to an all-white school. This helped make it easier for
other blacks to go to white schools, get a better education, and help improve
relations between blacks and whites. She didn’t think it was much of an
accomplishment until years later.
After
her brother was killed in a drug-related shooting, she began to realize what
she did in 1960 was very important for blacks. She then began to help other
troubled black kids. Ruby started volunteer work at the William Frantz
School . She helped
strengthen the school by developing the Ruby Bridges Foundation. She travels to
schools to explain the importance of reading, power of education, and integration
of races.
Becoming
Famous
Disney
made a TV movie based on her experiences. A book about Ruby titled The Story
of Ruby Bridges was published in 1995. When the book came out, Ruby’s first
grade teacher, Mrs. Henry, saw it and contacted her. They were reunited on the
"Oprah Winfrey Show." That was one of the greatest joys of Ruby’s
life. She has also been in contact again with Dr. Coles, her old child
psychiatrist. There was footage of Ruby in the television series, "Eyes on
the Prize," about the Civil Rights Movement. She also found out that she
was painted in a Norman Rockwell painting.
Ruby
finally reached a point where she felt her life had meaning. She feels that
there was a reason for what she went through. She played an important part in
bringing blacks and whites together. She did not know why she had to go through
it, but now believes that it was meant to be that way. Little Ruby Bridges
played an important role in the Civil Rights Movement.
Lisa Ekanger Your Hometown Realtor!
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