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    Lucille Bridges, first Black woman to send her daughter to all-white school, has died at the age of 86

    Lucille Bridges, the mother of civil rights activist Ruby Bridges, who walked with her then-6-year-old daughter past crowds screaming racist slurs as she became the first Black student at her all-white New Orleans elementary school, has died at the age of 86.

    Lucille’s death was announced by her daughter Ruby Bridges on Tuesday evening, November 10.

    Ruby Bridges wrote on her Instagram account, “Today our country lost a hero. Brave, progressive, a champion for change. She helped alter the course of so many lives by setting me out on my path as a six year old little girl. Our nation lost a Mother of the Civil Rights Movement today. And I lost my mom. I love you and am grateful for you. May you Rest In Peace.”

    Bridges gave birth to Ruby in Tylertown, Mississippi, in 1954, the same year as the landmark Brown vs. the Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas, decision that ended racial segregation in schools.

    Her daughter went on to become an icon of the Civil Rights Movement, memorialized in Norman Rockwell’s famous painting “The Problem We All Live With” which depicts a tiny Ruby in a white dress carrying her notebooks and a ruler surrounded by much taller U.S. Marshals. 

    Mayor LaToya Cantrell paid tribute to Lucille Bridges on Tuesday night, saying: “Today we mourn the loss of one of the mothers of the Civil Rights Movement in New Orleans with the passing of Lucille Bridges — mother of five, including Ruby Bridges. May she rest in God’s perfect peace.”

    Source: Lucky B.