Saturday, January 24, 2015

The Girl from the Tar Paper School: Barbara Rose Johns and the Advent of the Civil Rights Movement by Teri Kanefield

921 POW
        Before the Little Rock Nine, before Rosa Parks, before Martin Luther 
King Jr. and his March on Washington, there was Barbara Rose Johns, a 
teenager who used nonviolent civil disobedience to draw attention to her 
cause. In 1951, witnessing the unfair conditions in her racially segregated 
high school, Barbara Johns led a walkout—the first public protest of its kind 
demanding racial equality in the U.S.—jumpstarting the American civil 
rights movement. Ridiculed by the white superintendent and school board, 
local newspapers, and others, and even after a cross was burned on the 
school grounds, Barbara and her classmates held firm and did not give up. 
Her school’s case went all the way to the Supreme Court and helped end 
segregation as part of Brown v. Board of Education.
Barbara Johns grew up to become a librarian in the Philadelphia school 
system. The Girl from the Tar Paper School mixes biography with social 
history and is illustrated with family photos, images of the school and town, 
and archival documents from classmates and local and national news media. 
The book includes a civil rights timeline, bibliography, and index.

Barbara Johns, Civil Rights Activist: 1935 - 1991
"It was time that Negroes were treated equally with whites, 
time that they had a decent school, 
time for the students themselves to do something about it. 
There wasn’t any fear. 
I just thought --- this is your moment. Seize it!"

Portrait/Robert Shetterly/Americans Who Tell The Truth


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