A civil rights leader. At 16, she led a student strike for equal education at R.R. Moton High School in Farmville, Virginia.
Barbara Rose Johns Powell was born in NYC. During WW2, she moved with her family to her grandmother’s farm in Prince Edward County, Virginia. Her uncle was a civil rights activist who motivated Powell and her siblings to learn about black history and advocate injustice against African-Americans.
Powell attended Virginia’s segregated school system, which followed the “separate but equal” policy. But equality was not the reality, and while the white kids’ schools were well maintained, Powell’s school, R.R. Moton High School in Farmville, was neglected. It had poor facilities, was overcrowded, without science labs, and had no heat in the winter. In her junior year at the school, Powell expressed her frustration to one of her teachers, whose answer was – “Why don’t you do something about it?” and so she did.
On April 23rd, 1951, after a few months of working on a plan with her classmates, 16-year-old Powell managed to trick the principal and the teachers and gathered a student assembly, revealing her plan to strike in protests of the school’s substandard conditions. The 450 students left the assembly, Powell in the head, marching to the county courthouse demanding a new school with the same facilities that white schools have.
Powell contacted lawyers of the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People), who agreed to help them if the demand changes from equal facilities to an integrated school system. In the following month, the NAACP filed the Davis v. County School Board of Prince Edward County case, which together with four other cases reached the supreme court as part of the Brown v. Board of Education case. The court ruled that racial segregation in public schools is unconstitutional.
Being a leading figure of the protest and the integration movement, Powell was a subject of numerous harassments from the Ku Klux Klan, including a cross burning in her yard. To protect her, she was sent to her relatives in Montgomery, Alabama, to complete her education. After graduating high school, Powell studied library science at Drexel University. She married William Powell and had five children. They lived in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where she worked as a librarian for the city’s school system until she died of cancer at 56.
‘Brave, fearless’ Barbara Johns chosen to replace Robert E. Lee at U.S. Capitol
The younger sister of Virginia civil rights icon Barbara Rose Johns said she is “ecstatic” that her sister has been chosen to replace the statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee at the United States Capitol.
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Fun Facts
- A statue of her will represent Virginia in the National Statuary Hall Collection in the US Capitol, replacing General Lee’s statue.
- April 23rd is commemorated as Barbara Johns Day in Virginia.
- The Virginia Civil Rights Memorial in Richmond features her and several other students protestors.
- The Library of Virginia named her one of their Virginia Women in History.
- A portrait of her was installed in the Robert Russa Moton Museum in Farmville, Virginia.
- Virginia’s Office of the Attorney General is named in her honor.
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‘Brave, fearless’ Barbara Johns chosen to replace Robert E. Lee at U.S. Capitol
The younger sister of Virginia civil rights icon Barbara Rose Johns said she is “ecstatic” that her sister has been chosen to replace the statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee at the United States Capitol.This post is also available in:
Español