- Zelma Henderson
Zelma Henderson (
February 29 ,1920 -May 20 ,2008 ) was the last survivingplaintiff in the 1954 landmarkfederal school desegregation case, "Brown v. Board of Education ". cite news |first=Margalit |last=Fox|title=Zelma Henderson, Who Aided Desegregation, Dies at 88 |url=http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/22/us/22henderson.html?bl&ex=1211601600&en=d0a1ed67ee5b8c74&ei=5087%0A|work=New York Times |publisher= |date=2008-05-22 |accessdate=2008-05-29] The case outlawedsegregation nationwide in all of theUnited States 'public school s. The ruling served as aharbinger of theAmerican Civil Rights Movement and paved the way for theCivil Rights Act of 1964 , which outlawed segregation in all public facilities.Early life
Henderson was born as Zelma Cleota Hurst in
Colby, Kansas , onFebruary 29 ,1920 . Her family, The Hursts, were one of only twoAfrican American families living in Colby at the time. Her parents grewwheat and raisedcattle for a living. The family moved toOakley, Kansas , when she was still young.Kansas state law at the time required thatelementary schools in towns with a population of 15,000 or more had to be raciallysegregated . However, the law did not apply to either Colby or Oakley, since both towns had populations of under 15,000 people. As a result, Henderson attended integrated elementary schools in both towns alongside both black and white children. The law did not apply to Kansasmiddle school s orhigh schools , which wereintegrated throughout the state."Brown v. Board of Education"
Hurst encountered much more blatant
discrimination andsegregation when she moved to the city ofTopeka, Kansas , in 1940. She studied to become a cosmotologist at asegregated school , the Kansas Vocational School. She was known to be a very goodtypist , but could not find aclerical position in the city due to her race. She was instead offered domestic work instead, such as a housekeeper or maid.Henderson married her husband, Andrew Henderson, in 1943. She opened her own
beauty salon within her home soon after her marriage. The Hendersons had two children, Donald Henderson and Vicki Henderson, who were bused to a segregated, all black school on the otherside of the city of Topeka. This discrimination angered Henderson, who had been educated in integrated schools as a child. She later told the "Boston Globe " in aninterview , "I knew what integration was and how well it worked and couldn’t understand why we were separated here in Topeka."Henderson became involved in the legal fight against the city's segregated schools in 1950, when the local Topeka chapter of the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) began preparing for aclass action suit against the Topeka public school system. The NAACP asked 13 parents of African American public school students, which included Oliver Brown and 12 women, including Zelma Henderson, to serve as plaintiffs in the case. Henderson quickly agreed. In the case, whose full name was "Oliver L. Brown et al. v. the Board of Education of Topeka ", Henderson was the lastet al listed on the plaintiff's side of the original case.The
lawsuit , with Henderson as one of the 13 plaintiffs, was first filed in 1951 in theUnited States District Court in Kansas. The U.S. District Court ruled against the plaintiffs, citing the 1896 "separate but equal " ruling by the United States Supreme Court in "Plessy v. Ferguson ".The 1951 ruling was appealed to the United States Supreme Court after it was combined with four smiliar cases originating from the
District of Columbia ,Delaware ,Virginia andSouth Carolina under the shortended case name of "Brown v. Board of Education ". The United States Supreme Court unanimously struck down school segregation in its decision onMay 17 ,1954 . Chief Justice Earl Warren wrote for the unanimous majority decision, "Separate educational facilities are inherently unequal," in agreement with Henderson and the other plaintiff's original suit.Henderson appeared in numerous events commemorating the decision throughout her life. In a 1994
Dallas Morning News interview, she told the interviewingreporter , "None of us knew that this case would be so important and come to the magnitude it has. What little bit I did, I feel I helped the whole nation."Death
Zelma Henderson died in Topeka, Kansas, at the age of 88 of
pancreatic cancer on May 20, 2008. She was the last survivor of the original "Brown v. Board of Education" of Topeka case.She was survived by her son, Donald, five grandchildren and fifteen great-grandchildren. Her husband, Andrew Henderson, died in 1971 and their daughter, Vicki, died in 1984.
References
External links
* [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4179/is_20040509/ai_n11812965 Topeka Capital-Journal: Many people part of local case: Thirteen parents representing 20 children signed up as Topeka plaintiffs]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.