Texarkana Gazette

Linda Brown, subject of landmark court decision, dies at 75

- By Neil Genzlinger

Linda Brown, whose father objected when she was not allowed to attend an all-white school in her neighborho­od and who thus came to symbolize one of the most transforma­tive court proceeding­s in American history, the school desegregat­ion case Brown v. Board of Education, died Sunday in Topeka, Kansas. She was 75. Her death was confirmed Monday by a spokesman for the Peaceful Rest Funeral Chapel in Topeka, which is handling her funeral arrangemen­ts. He did not specify the cause. It is Brown’s father, Oliver, whose name is attached to the famous case, although the suit that ended up in the U.S. Supreme Court actually represente­d a number of families in several states. In 1954, in a unanimous decision, the court ruled that segregated schools were inherently unequal. The decision upended decades’ worth of educationa­l practice, in the South and elsewhere, and its ramificati­ons are still being felt. Linda Brown was born on Feb. 20, 1943, in Topeka to Leola and Oliver Brown, according to the funeral home. (Some sources say she was born in 1942.) Cheryl Brown Henderson, Linda’s sister and the founding president of the Brown Foundation, an educationa­l organizati­on devoted to the case, recalled her parents and others being recruited to press a test case. “They were told, ‘Find the nearest white school to your home and take your child or children and a witness, and attempt to enroll in the fall, and then come back and tell us what happened,’” she said in a video interview for History NOW. The neighborho­od the family lived in was integrated. “I played with children that were Spanish-American,” Linda Brown said in a 1985 interview. “I played with children that were white, children that were Indian, and black children in my neighborho­od.” Nor were her parents dissatisfi­ed with the black school she was attending. What upset Oliver Brown was the distance Linda had to travel to get to school— first a walk through a rail yard and across a busy road, then a bus ride. In an interview with The Miami Herald in 1987, Linda Brown remembered the fateful day in September 1950 when her father took her to the Sumner School. “It was a bright, sunny day and we walked briskly, and I remember getting to these great big steps,” she said. The school told her father no, she could not be enrolled. “I could tell something was wrong, and he came out and took me by the hand and we walked back home,” she said of her father. “We walked even more briskly, and I could feel the tension being transferre­d from his hand to mine.” In its ruling, the Supreme Court threw out the prevailing “separate but equal” doctrine, which had allowed racial segregatio­n in the schools as long as students of all races were afforded equal facilities. By the time of the Supreme Court ruling, Brown was in an integrated junior high school. She later became an educationa­l consultant and public speaker.

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