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New Orleans Four Parade
Civil rights activists, from left to right, Gail Etienne, Dorothy Prevost and Dorotha Dodie Smith-Simmons watch marching bands pass by to celebrate the sixty-four-year anniversary of the New Orleans Four desegregating schools Thursday, Nov. 14, 2024, in New Orleans. (AP Photo/Stephen Smith)

New Orleans marks with parade the 64th anniversary of 4 little girls integrating city schools

A parade in downtown New Orleans marked the 64th anniversary of the day four Black 6-year-old girls integrated New Orleans schools

By STEPHEN SMITH and CHEVEL JOHNSON
Published - Nov 14, 2024, 06:10 PM ET
Last Updated - Dec 16, 2024, 05:23 PM EST

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."

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