Current:Home > MarketsNew Orleans marks with parade the 64th anniversary of 4 little girls integrating city schools -PrimeWealth Guides
New Orleans marks with parade the 64th anniversary of 4 little girls integrating city schools
View
Date:2025-04-14 14:03:39
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! (98364)
Related
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- Pink Barbie cheesesteak a huge hit in central N.Y. eatery
- State ordered to release documents in Whitmer kidnap plot case
- Mortgage rates just hit 7.09%, the highest since 2002. Will they ever come down?
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Bella Hadid Makes Return to Modeling Amid Health Journey
- Nearly 100 arrested in global child sex abuse operation launched after murder of FBI agents
- Bollinger Shipyard plans to close its operations in New Orleans after 3 decades
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Atlanta begins to brace for the potential of a new Trump indictment as soon as next week
Ranking
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- I've spent my career explaining race, but hit a wall with Montgomery brawl memes
- Bollinger Shipyard plans to close its operations in New Orleans after 3 decades
- Inflation got a little higher in July as prices for rent and gas spiked
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- Mic thrown by Cardi B at fan sells for nearly $100,000 at auction
- Russia hits Ukraine with deadly hypersonic missile strike as Kyiv claims local women spying for Moscow
- Bethany Joy Lenz to Detail “Spiritual Abuse” Suffered in Cult in Upcoming Memoir
Recommendation
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
Lahaina Is ‘like a war zone,’ Maui evacuees say
Wildfire devastates Hawaii’s historic Lahaina Town, a former capital of the kingdom
3 hikers found dead after not returning from one of the narrowest ridge crests in Britain
Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
Northwestern football coaches wear 'Cats Against The World' T-shirts amid hazing scandal
How heat makes health inequity worse, hitting people with risks like diabetes harder
Sen. Dianne Feinstein recovering after hospital visit for minor fall at California home