Ruby Bridges - 64 Parishes (2024)

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Ruby Bridges, along with Leona Tate, Gail Etienne, and Tessie Prevost, was one of the first Black students to desegregate an all-white public school in New Orleans.

by Nikki Brown

This entry is 8th Grade level   View Full Entry

Ruby Bridges - 64 Parishes (1)

Ruby Bridges rose to national prominence during the New Orleans school crisis of 1960. Bridges, along with Leona Tate, Gail Etienne, and Tessie Prevost, was one of the first Black students to attend an all-white public school in New Orleans. As the United States gradually implemented the federal mandate to desegregate public schools, Bridges became a symbol of the civil rights movement and the tenacity of its advocates. An innocent child at the center of the crisis, Bridges evoked passionate responses on both sides of the debate.

How did New Orleans respond to the Supreme Court’s order to desegregate schools?

Born on September 8, 1954, Ruby Nell Bridges was the oldest child of Abon and Lucille Bridges. She spent her first years in Tylertown, Mississippi, where members of her extended family worked as sharecroppers, earning meager profits for their labors. Looking for better employment opportunities, the Bridges family moved to New Orleans in 1958.

The New Orleans school crisis began in the summer of 1960, but the seeds for it were laid back in 1954. In its decision on Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas, the US Supreme Court ruled that racially segregated public schools were unconstitutional and ordered public schools desegregate with “all deliberate speed.” There was deep resistance to desegregation across the United States, even in New Orleans, a city known for its relative tolerance in race matters. Public officials, ideologues, and the New Orleans Times-Picayune staunchly defended racial segregation.

To postpone desegregation, the Orleans Parish School Board repeatedly asked Judge J. Skelly Wright for more time to implement the policy in June and July of 1960. When that failed, they asked Governor Jimmie Davis to intervene and then threatened to close all public schools rather than desegregate them. Each time the school board resisted the order to desegregate, Judge Wright rejected the excuses and threatened to imprison any legislator attempting to thwart the law. Finally, the school board developed a plan to begin school integration using a transfer arrangement. Each Black student who wished to attend white schools was required to pass an intelligence test, which allegedly measured intellectual promise. The families of the Black students also underwent an extensive background check. White students who chose to attend a Black school, in contrast, had no such requirements.

The school board planned to integrate grade by grade, beginning with kindergarten and first grade. Four six-year-old Black girls were selected to desegregate two elementary schools, both located in the white, working-class Ninth Ward neighborhood of New Orleans.

Ruby Bridges was assigned to William J. Frantz Elementary School, while Tate, Prevost, and Etienne were to attend McDonogh No. 19 Elementary School. The children were set to start school in September 1960, but the desegregation date was delayed until November 14 to give the schools additional time to prepare.

How did the public respond to Ruby attending Frantz Elementary?

As soon as the girls entered their schools, a crisis erupted. Pro-segregation parents, encouraged by the Louisiana legislature, the Orleans Parish School Board, and white supremacist politicians like Leander Perez organized a boycott of the schools and bullied other parents into keeping their children home. “Cheerleaders,” as they called themselves, stood outside of McDonogh and Frantz and harassed parents sympathetic to integration. The cheerleaders screamed insults, destroyed property, and splashed paint on the homes of sympathetic families. They even tried to get some parents fired from their jobs.

During this crisis Ruby Bridges became the focus of public attention. Every day she walked through a gauntlet of bitter hatred. Outwardly she appeared to handle the stress well. She remained attentive, good-natured, and calm throughout the crisis. Her mother and father argued about continuing to send her to school but eventually agreed that Bridges had become a role model for other children in the South.

On November 14 and for the rest of the school year, Bridges required the assistance of federal marshals who escorted her to and from school. A psychiatrist, Robert Coles, was also hired to counsel Bridges through the trauma. After one protestor threatened to poison her food, Bridges stopped eating the lunches her mother prepared for her. Her persistence was immortalized by Norman Rockwell in the painting The Problem We All Live With. As white parents continued their boycott, Bridges was the only student in attendance at the school between January and May 1961. Tate, Prevost, and Etienne faced similar abandonment by white families at their elementary school. Despite the crisis, the process of desegregation continued the following school year. The courts told the Orleans Parish School Board in unequivocal terms that desegregation would continue. Legal challenges by the legislature and the school board continued to fail, and the federal government threatened to use force to uphold the law.

Bridges completed her elementary education at Frantz. She later earned a graduate degree in business and worked for fifteen years in travel and tourism. In 1999 she founded the Ruby Bridges Foundation, which specializes in conflict management and diversity education. She is the author of Ruby Bridges Goes to School, This Is Your Time, and other books about her experience as a child during the civil rights movement. She resides in New Orleans with her husband and children.

Author

Nikki Brown

Additional Data

Entry Published March 22, 2023
Entry Last Updated June 28, 2023
Coverage 1954–present
Category
Topics
Regions Greater New Orleans, Orleans
Time Periods Contemporary Period, Late-20th Century, Long Era
Index letter R
Grade Level 8th Grade: The United States and Louisiana: Industrial Age Through The Modern Era
Louisiana K­–12
Student Standard(s) for Social Studies
8.15 d.

8.15 Analyze causes, major events, and key leaders of the Civil Rights Movement from 1954 to 1968.

d. Analyze the importance of the Brown v. Board of Education (1954) decision and subsequent efforts to desegregate schools, including those of the Little Rock Nine at Central High School in Arkansas, Ruby Bridges at William Frantz Elementary in Louisiana, and James Meredith at the University of Mississippi.

Adapted From The text of "Ruby Bridges" is adapted from the following 64 Parishes encyclopedia entry or entries:
"Ruby Bridges" by Nikki Brown
Credit This material was created through a partnership between the Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities and the Louisiana Department of Education with funding provided by the Louisiana Department of Education and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-ShareAlike license (CC BY-NC-SA).
Ruby Bridges - 64 Parishes (2024)

FAQs

Why did Ruby Bridges stop eating? ›

She suffered threats to her life through these months. At one point, Ruby stopped eating the lunches her mother sent with her to school, facing threats by protesters that her food would be poisoned.

What is Ruby Bridges' famous quote? ›

One famous quote by Ruby Bridges was from a speech given at the dedication of her new Ruby Bridges Foundation ceremony. She said, "Racism is a grownup disease. Let's stop using kids to spread it."

What happened to Ruby Bridges when she was 4? ›

When she was four years old, her family moved to New Orleans. Two years later a test was given to the city's African American schoolchildren to determine which students could enter all-white schools. Bridges passed the test and was selected for enrollment at the city's William Frantz Elementary School.

What are some questions about Ruby Bridges? ›

Test Quiz
  • Where was Ruby Bridges born? ...
  • What is Ruby Bridges most known for? ...
  • What did it mean when schools were segregated in the South? ...
  • What grade was Ruby in when she first attended a previously all-white school? ...
  • How many students were in Ruby's class her first year at the William Frantz School?

Did Ruby Bridges dad lose his job? ›

The effects of Ruby's bravery took a toll on the Bridges family. Her father lost his job at the gas station, the grocery store where they shopped banned them from returning, and the farm owners sent Ruby's grandparents from the farm they had sharecropped for over 25 years.

What happened to Ruby Bridges' siblings? ›

Ruby Bridges had several siblings. One of them, Malcolm, was killed in 1993 in a drug-related incident. He was Ruby's youngest brother and she took care of his children for a time after the killing.

Was Ruby Bridges polite? ›

There were no other children to keep Ruby company, to play with and learn with, to eat lunch with. But every day, Ruby went into the classroom with a big smile on her face, ready to get down to the business of learning. “She was polite and she worked well at her desk,” Mrs. Henry said.

Did Ruby Bridges go to school alone? ›

The white parents all withdrew their children from the school, and the staff refused to teach Bridges, except for one teacher: Barbara Henry, who had come from Boston. For the first year, Henry taught Bridges alone, just the two of them in the classroom.

What inspired Ruby Bridges? ›

Bridges was inspired following the murder of her youngest brother, Malcolm Bridges, in a drug-related killing in 1993 — which brought her back to her former elementary school. For a time, Bridges looked after Malcolm's four children, who attended William Frantz School.

What did Ruby Bridges' dad do? ›

The Bridges family suffered for their decision to send her to William Frantz Elementary: her father lost his job as a gas station attendant; the grocery store the family shopped at would no longer let them shop there; her grandparents, who were sharecroppers in Mississippi, were turned off their land; and Abon and ...

Did Ruby Bridges get married? ›

Ruby graduated from a desegregated high school, became a travel agent, married and had four sons.

Who is Ruby Bridges 4th son? ›

Answer and Explanation: Following her marriage to Malcolm Hall, Ruby Bridges had four sons. Her sons are named Sean Hall, Christopher Hall, and Craig Hall, as well as a fourth, publicly unnamed son. Bridges son Craig Hall was killed in a street shooting in New Orleans in 2005.

What are 2 important facts about Ruby Bridges? ›

She was the first African American child to desegregate William Frantz Elementary School. At six years old, Ruby's bravery helped pave the way for Civil Rights action in the American South. Ruby was born on September 8, 1954 to Abon and Lucille Bridges in Tylertown, Mississippi. She was the eldest of five children.

Who is Ruby Bridges for kids? ›

(born 1954). As a child, Ruby Bridges was one of the first Black students to attend formerly all-white schools in New Orleans, Louisiana. She was the only Black child to enroll at the city's William Frantz Elementary School in 1960, when she was six years old.

What did Ruby Bridges struggle with? ›

Ruby faced blatant racism every day while entering the school. Many parents kept their children at home. People outside the school threw objects, police set up barricades. She was threatened and even “greeted" by a woman displaying a black doll in a wooden coffin.

What do Ruby Bridges eat? ›

For dinner, they ate New Orleans or Southern food like red beans and rice. Sometimes, they had fried catfish or shrimp for dinner. Ruby's favorite desserts were banana pudding and sweet potato pie.

Why does Ruby only eat packaged food? ›

Robert reveals to Abon and Lucy that Ruby has been acting strange, and Lucy agrees, noting her odd eating habits. Robert thinks that Ruby is afraid of being poisoned, based on the threats of a female heckler outside the school. According to Robert, that's why Ruby will now only eat packaged foods.

Why did Ruby Bridges suffer from PTSD? ›

Ruby's Struggles

Not only did they shout hateful things at her, but they threatened her as well. One of the horrific things they did was put black doll in a coffin to represent Ruby. Because of her experiences while desegregating Ruby suffered from PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder).

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