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mahatmakanejeeves

(59,613 posts)
Wed Jul 10, 2024, 02:45 PM Jul 10

Tessie Prevost, pioneer of Deep South school desegregation, dies at 69

OBITUARIES
Tessie Prevost, pioneer of Deep South school desegregation, dies at 69

JULY 9, 20246:58 PM ET
Debbie Elliot

NEW ORLEANS — Tessie Prevost, a pioneer of school desegregation in the Deep South, has died. ... She was one of the first young Black girls who integrated New Orleans public schools after federal courts forced the system to abide by the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1954 Brown vs. the Board of Education ruling that declared segregated schools unconstitutional.

Prevost made history on Nov. 14, 1960, along with Gail Etienne and Leona Tate, known as the McDonogh 3. At age 6, federal marshals escorted them past hostile white crowds to enroll in McDonogh 19 Elementary School in New Orleans' Lower 9th Ward. They were ostracized and formed a tight bond.

"The way we were prepared was not to do anything alone,” Tate recalled Tuesday in an NPR interview. “Whatever we did, we had to do it with the three of us.” ... White parents pulled their children out of the school, so for the entire first grade the three African-American girls were alone. They weren’t allowed to eat in the school cafeteria, or use the playground, so they played underneath an internal stairwell. ... The historic school is now preserved as the Tate Etienne and Prevost Center, an interpretive space to teach New Orleans’ civil rights history.

A fourth Black student in New Orleans, Ruby Bridges, integrated the all-white William Franz Elementary School the same year.

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Tessie Prevost, pioneer of Deep South school desegregation, dies at 69 (Original Post) mahatmakanejeeves Jul 10 OP
Talk about heros with guts. Biophilic Jul 10 #1
Unbelievable courage by all those who stood up -- or sat down -- while protesting segregation. Silent Type Jul 10 #2

Silent Type

(5,305 posts)
2. Unbelievable courage by all those who stood up -- or sat down -- while protesting segregation.
Wed Jul 10, 2024, 02:56 PM
Jul 10
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