Leona Tate
Leona Tate is an American activist, civil rights pioneer, and community advocate from New Orleans. She was one of the first Black children in the United States to desegregate a public elementary school.
Biography
Early life and education
Tate was born and raised in the Lower Ninth Ward of New Orleans. She and her family were selected among many applicants to be the initial implementers of school desegregation.On the morning of November 14, 1960, four 6-year-old girls: Tate, Tessie Prevost, Gail Etienne and Ruby Bridges became the first African Americans to desegregate formerly all white elementary public schools in New Orleans and the Deep South. Three of the girls, Tate, Prevost and Etienne enrolled at McDonogh 19 Elementary School at 5909 St. Claude Avenue, and Bridges enrolled at William Frantz Elementary School at 3811 North Galvez Street.
As soon as Tate and her peers entered the schools, the white children were pulled out by their parents; for 18 months the girls were the only students in their class. With worldwide attention focused on New Orleans, federal marshals wearing yellow armbands began escorting The New Orleans Four into the schools at 9 a.m. By 9:25 a.m., the two public elementary schools in the Deep South were integrated.
In 1962, the school became an all black-school and as a result, Tate, Etienne and Prevost marched on to integrate another formerly all white elementary school, T.J. Semmes.
The integration of New Orleans public elementary schools marked a major focal point in the history of the American civil rights movement.