… “a landmark of freedom.”
As she grew older, Linda Brown became more vocal, fighting segregation in schools again in the 1970s and traveling the country to talk about her experience in Topeka.
Carolyn Campbell, a lifelong friend of Linda Brown and a former Kansas Board of Education member said, “Linda was quiet. It was difficult for Linda to be pushed into the spotlight at a young age.”
“Linda was a spiritual Christian woman that loved not only the Lord, but she loved her family and took on the responsibility of what Brown v. Board of Education meant to her. Her legacy will be that she shared all of her life with all of us,” Campbell said.