A young black girl, named Linda Brown, had to attend a black school, which was much farther than the seven blocks to the local white school. Her father, and many other parents with the same issue, tried to get their children into the closer white school, to no avail. It was said that the schools were equal, (they weren't), and as the principle kept refusing them, a legal case was made against the Topeka Board of Education. The case, taken all the way to the Supreme Court, was won in the favor of Oliver Brown. The unanimous ruling was that separate establishments are inherently unequal, undoing the decision made in Plessy v. Ferguson. All schools were required to be integrated, but it was quite a while before this was fully accomplished. There was a lot of resistance to this decision.
Picture taken on first day of desegregation in Ft Myer Elementary, courtesy of the New York Times.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/10/weekinreview/10liptak.html?pagewanted=all...