How HBCU Students Impacted the Civil Rights Movement

Blacks who showed bravery in the fight for equal rights.

A Fight for Equal Rights - As the country commemorates the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom of 1963, many look back on bravery displayed by African-Americans who helped lead the civil rights movement. Take a look at the role students and alumni of Black colleges and universities had in the fight for equal rights. —Natelege Whaley     (BIRMINGHAM NEWS)
Thurgood Marshall - Thurgood Marshall in 1967 became the first African-American to serve on the U.S. Supreme Court.(Photo: Keystone/Getty Images)
Ella Baker - Ella Baker organized the Young Negroes Cooperative League in New York City and was a national director for the NAACP. She also helped form the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, was a member of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and helped the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee support civil rights activism on college campuses.  (Photo: Courtesy of Library of Congress)
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Thurgood Marshall - Thurgood Marshall who was an alumnus of two HBCUs, Lincoln University and Howard University Law School, argued before the Supreme Court in 1954, as an attorney for the NAACP to help win the landmark case of Brown v. Board of Education. The court declared racial segregation in public schools unconstitutional. Marshall later became the first African-American judge appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court.(Photo: Keystone/Getty Images)

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