Around the 1940’s many people were being discriminated for their race. This was hard, especially for children who had no idea why they were being treated the way they were. All the schools were segregated, so they could not go to the same school as the white children they may have lived near. One school girl was willing to fight, with her family, to go to the same school her white friends went to. She decided, with the help of her dad, to bring the Board of Education to court. This court case was an advancement in getting rights for African Americans. This couldn’t of happened without the help of Linda Brown. Though she lived near an all white school she had to travel across town to a black children school. Linda’s father was fed up with segregation …show more content…
In Topeka Kansas, to Leola and Oliver Brown (“Linda Brown Biography”). She grew up with her two younger sisters in a neighborhood that was culturally unlike. Linda was required to walk a strenuous amount to her elementary school although there was a school four blocks away from her house. She was unable to attend the school closest to her house because of the color of her skin. The school she was not able to attend to, Sumner, was known for being racially segregated. They would usually have separate facilities for the black and white children. Linda and her father were sick of traveling across town to go to a different school, Linda’s father with a handful of other parents were asked by the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) to enroll to the all white school, with the expectation of being rejected (“Linda Brown Thompson”). When Linda was in third grade Oliver, Linda’s father decided to make the bold step in enrolling her into Sumner Elementary. The school denied their entry. Oliver Brown took this situation to court, with 13 other families to back him up. Since Brown is alphabetically first the court case is known as Brown v. Board of Education. A short time after, the case made it all the way to the Supreme