Young civil rights activist Barbara Johns was a pioneering leader in the American civil rights movement. On April 23, 1951, at the age of 16, she led a student strike for equal education at segregated Moton High School in Virginia. The students stayed out in protest for two weeks, eventually gaining the support of the NAACP and becoming the only student-initiated case consolidated into Brown v Board of Education, the landmark Supreme Court decision declaring “separate but equal” unconstitutional. Naja Butler, whose great-grandfather fought alongside Johns explains that Barbara Johns' quote "It seemed like reaching for the moon" inspires her to go after anything and have "willingness to put yourself out there.”
Our storytellers share these astonishing women with us conversationally and unscripted; we fact-check afterwards and note any major discrepancies for accuracy.
Credits:
Director / Producer: Farrel Levy
Assoc. Producer: Cara Harrington
Assoc. Producer: Marlene Zuccaro
Editor: Farrel Levy
Dialogue Editor: Daniel Raphael
Color: Billy Koak
Post Production Supervisor: Courtney Graham