The Firsts

The children who desegregated America

This project is supported by a grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

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Jo Ann Allen Boyce and nine other Black students walk together down an empty road on their first day of desegregating Clinton High School in Clinton, Tennessee.
Howard Sochurek / The LIFE Picture Collection / Getty

The Undoing of a Tennessee Town

Jo Ann Allen Boyce and 11 other students desegregated their high school in Clinton, Tennessee. Then the riots came.
In a picture of Hugh Price from his high school yearbook, he sits with three white students, acting as the vice president for his senior class.
Courtesy of Hugh Price

The Limits of Desegregation in Washington, D.C.

Hugh Price and his family fought for him to be one of the first Black students at his all-white high school in Washington, D.C. But once he was there, he “couldn’t wait for it to be over.”