Gr 6 Up—This is the story of a Farmville, Virginia high schooler, who, in 1953, led a student strike for a better-built school on par with the building for white students. Although she was known as a quiet, reserved student, Johns was so incensed about the terrible conditions in which she and her classmates were required to learn that she engineered the exit of the principal from her school, mocked up a call to assembly, and then led students out on strike. She contacted the NAACP, which counseled that students return to class. When they refused, the organization told Johns that it would support only movements for integration. Students then worked to get an agreement to request integration from their parents and the broader black community. Once the community aligned behind integration as the eventual goal and a lawsuit was filed, students returned to class. The suit filed on behalf of the Farmville students ended up in the Supreme Court, one of the four cases that comprised the historic
Brown v.
Board of Education ruling. Beautifully and clearly written, this story of a teen who refused to be deterred in her pursuit of educational equality is matched by period photos-many of them located only after significant effort, as the Johns's home was burned-and primary source quotations. A "Civil Rights Timeline," solid end notes and source notes, and a sound index round out this excellent look at the roots and the breadth of the Civil Rights Movement.—
Ann Welton, Grant Elementary School, Tacoma, WAA heartfelt tribute to Barbara Rose Johns, a lesser-known heroine of the early civil rights movement. In 1951 Virginia, black Robert R. Moton High School and white Farmville High were separate but definitely not equal, and quiet Barbara and her classmates decided to strike. Profuse details, some extraneous, threaten to overtake the inspiring story of bravery. Timeline. Bib., ind.
This captivating volume sheds light on a lesser-known activist, Barbara Rose Johns, who, as a quiet and well-behaved sixteen-year-old, became an unlikely civil rights pioneer. In 1951, she fought to have the leaky, uninsulated “tar paper shacks,” used as classrooms at her all-black high school, replaced with facilities equal to the nearby white high school. Barbara’s determination and conviction are inspiring. Over a decade before Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr. had entered the public stage, Barbara led a school-wide protest, standing up to a disapproving principal and school board members, mocking media, violent threats, and even NAACP lawyers who thought the case was too ambitious for a “backwater” town such as rural Farmville, Virginia. Told with colorful detail, this account also includes context to help readers understand the predominant mindset of southerners in the 1950s. For example, to clarify an anecdote about Barbara talking back to a customer who called her father “Uncle Robert,” a sidebar explains that southern whites sometimes addressed blacks as “Uncle” and “Aunt,” degrading terms used instead of “Mr.” and “Mrs.” Though many artifacts of Barbara’s family history were lost in a suspicious fire soon after her case helped desegregate schools in the Brown v. Board of Education decision, this book contains rare photos of Barbara and her classmates, alongside other relevant historical images.
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