Encounter in Little Rock Nine In 1957, a group of nine African American students, known as the Little Rock Nine, were enrolled in Little Rock Central High School. In the landmark case Brown v. Board Education, the U.S. Supreme Court case ruled that segregating public high schools was unconstitutional. As a result of the Brown v. Board Education case, the Little Rock Nine forced Americans to explore issues of race, involve the federal government to enforce desegregation, and set a precedent for education equality. The Little Rock Nine crisis was one of the key events of the Civil Right Movement. Local leader of the NAACP, Daisy Bates, recruited nine African American teenagers to enroll at Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas. Throughout the time of the event, …show more content…
Eisenhower ordered the 101st Airborne Division to protect the nine students because Orval Eugene Faubus, Governor of Arkansas, was against African American kids attending an all white school. Yet, the brave nine African American students faced racial barriers to become the first black students to attend an all white school. A few years before the Little Rock Nine crisis, schools were desegregated. The Brown v. Board Education case took on several other cases in South Carolina, Delaware, Kansas, and Virginia. The case was clearly described how an African American is unable to enter a segregated school because of their race. Also, the case argued to integrate public schools. Since the court agreed that segregating students was unconstitutional under the Fourteenth Amendment, they voted in the student’s favor. ( Brown v. Education: Case Brief Summary ) Therefore, states were