• News
    • Celebrities
    • Viral Video
    • We See You
    • Sports
    • Bolitics
    • SMH
    • Jesus Take The Wheel
    • What the Hell???
  • Exclusives
  • Bossip TV
  • Tips

R.I.P. Jefferson Thomas, One Of Central High’s ‘Little Rock Nine’

Written by Janeé Bolden
Published on September 7, 2010

Share the post

Share this link via

Or copy link

R.I.P. to another Civil Rights hero.

Jefferson Thomas, one of the “Little Rock Nine” who provoked a major civil rights battle when they integrated Arkansas’ largest public high school in 1957 over the opposition of Gov. Orval E. Faubus, died Sept. 5 at a care facility in Columbus, Ohio.

Mr. Thomas, who was 67, had pancreatic cancer. His death was confirmed by Carlotta Walls LaNier, who also enrolled at Central High School in 1957 and is president of the Little Rock Nine Foundation.

Many school districts in the South defied the 1954 Supreme Court ruling that declared racial segregation unconstitutional, forcing lawsuits and violent methods of enforcement. One of the first and most shocking showdowns occurred in Little Rock, when Faubus ordered the state’s National Guard to keep black students out of Central High in September 1957.

President Dwight D. Eisenhower sent the Army’s 101st Airborne Division to carry out the court’s mandate. Nine black students were caught in the middle — corralled by a spitting and rock-throwing mob of white protesters.

Taylor Branch, a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian of the civil rights movement, once described Central High’s integration as the “first on-site news extravaganza of the modern television era,” and the subsequent images of the confrontation shocked millions for their disturbing look at American race relations.

Mr. Thomas said decades later that he was stunned and traumatized by the violence. He said Little Rock neighborhoods had not been segregated, even if the schools were, and he often practiced football on weekends with white kids from Central High before the conflict over integration.

“I had no reason to think that the quiet, peaceful place where I grew up could change so drastically,” he told the Los Angeles Times. “I used to go to Central on weekends and play ball with the kids there.”

Continued…

Mr. Thomas, who lived a mile from Central High and three miles from the all-black high school, was a 15-year-old sophomore and track standout when he volunteered to break the color barrier at Central.

More than 100 black students volunteered, but the list was pared down by school officials. Only nine showed up on Sept. 4, 1957, to go to school, but they were denied entry by the Arkansas National Guard. They entered successfully on Sept. 25, escorted by the 101st Airborne.

Besides LaNier, the others were Minnijean Brown Trickey, Elizabeth Eckford, Gloria Ray Karlmark, Thelma Mothershed Wair, Terrence Roberts, Melba Pattillo Beals and Ernest Green.

The superintendent of schools counseled the teenagers not to retaliate against white protesters as the war between federal and state authority was captured on television. Once attending school, many of the nine were harassed and intimidated for months and years to come.

Brown Trickey was expelled after dumping a bowl of chili over the head of a white student who had insulted her; Mr. Thomas, Green and LaNier were the only ones of the Nine to graduate from Central, although all of them went on to college and careers.

Mr. Thomas said he tried whenever possible to avoid drawing attention.

“I would get out of the way,” he told the Times. “I was a skinny little guy. I’d been on the track team in junior high. I could run fast. I looked at it this way: If I’d been in an all-black school and a 6-foot-1, 200-pound guy pushed me around, I wouldn’t go flying into his chest. Mentally what would hurt was when little puny guys came up and slapped you in the face. You couldn’t hit back.

“We got better experienced at getting out of the way as the year went on. You’d laugh at the fact that they ran into the wall while they were going after you.”

Jefferson Allison Thomas, the youngest of seven children, was born Sept. 19, 1942, in Little Rock.

He said his role in the integration of Central High “destroyed the family base,” noting that his father was fired from a sales job with International Harvester because of the controversy. The elder Thomas scraped by as a handyman and, the day after his son’s graduation, moved to the family out of the state.

Jefferson Thomas later recalled his family’s journey to California as a scene of misery from the pages of John Steinbeck’s Depression-era novel “The Grapes of Wrath” — “everything on top of the car and you move off.”

He received a degree in business administration from what became California State University at Los Angeles and then served in the Army in Vietnam. He later worked in accounting for Mobil Oil and the Defense Department, from which he retired several years ago.

In 1964, he narrated “Nine From Little Rock,” the Academy Award-winning documentary short directed by Charles Guggenheim that explored the incident through Mr. Thomas’s eyes.

His first marriage, to Fatima Thomas, ended in divorce. Survivors include his wife, Mary Branch Thomas of Groveport, Ohio, whom he married in 1998; a son from his first marriage, Jefferson Thomas Jr. of Los Angeles; two stepchildren, Frank Harper of Pittsburgh and Marilyn Carter of Columbus; three brothers; three sisters; a granddaughter; and a great-granddaughter.

On the 40th anniversary of their enrollment, members of the Little Rock Nine received Congressional Gold Medals, the highest award bestowed by Congress. They were presented by President Bill Clinton in a White House ceremony.

It took a lot of bravery for those kids to integrate that school — something many people take for granted today. Segregation still hasn’t happened successfully in many areas of America, but our society should always show gratitude toward Jefferson Thomas and the other members of the “Little Rock Nine”

Rest In Peace

Source

Related Tags

Arkansas Civil Rights R.I.P
More from Bossip
  • Jimmy Carter x Kamala Harris

    Running On Hope: Jimmy Carter's Son Says Former President Wants To Live Long Enough To Vote Kamala Harris

  • Rep. Mike Lawler...

    Tropic Thunder Faceazz: Republican Rep. Mike Lawler Outed For Blackface Michael Jackson Costume

  • VH1's Hip Hop Honors: The 90's Game Changers - Arrivals

    Quarantine Glo Up: Home Bawdy'd Teairra Mari Looks The BEST She’s Ever Looked And Here’s PROOF

  • Femme It Forward Give Her FlowHERS Awards

    Whew Lawd! The Hottest Thirst Traps Of The Week, Vol. 56

  • Djimon Hounsou US-ENTERTAINMENT-FILM-QUIETPLACE

    Oscar Nominee Djimon Hounsou Opens Up About Financial Struggles & Racism In Hollywood — 'Systemic Racism Won’t Change Anytime Soon'

  • All's Fair

    This is a test of slideshows

  • Police line in the forest at a crime scene

    We Demand Answers: Rasheem Carter's Body Was Found Decapitated In Mississippi Woods, Cops Say 'No Foul Play'

  • My Feet Are Killing Me

    TLC's 'My Feet Are Killing Me' Exclusive Clip: Dr. Ebonie Benevolently Blesses A Patient Whose Feet Were Mangled In A Car Crash [Video]

  • Jimmy Carter x Kamala Harris

    Running On Hope: Jimmy Carter's Son Says Former President Wants To Live Long Enough To Vote Kamala Harris

  • Rep. Mike Lawler...

    Tropic Thunder Faceazz: Republican Rep. Mike Lawler Outed For Blackface Michael Jackson Costume

  • VH1's Hip Hop Honors: The 90's Game Changers - Arrivals

    Quarantine Glo Up: Home Bawdy'd Teairra Mari Looks The BEST She’s Ever Looked And Here’s PROOF

  • Femme It Forward Give Her FlowHERS Awards

    Whew Lawd! The Hottest Thirst Traps Of The Week, Vol. 56

  • Djimon Hounsou US-ENTERTAINMENT-FILM-QUIETPLACE

    Oscar Nominee Djimon Hounsou Opens Up About Financial Struggles & Racism In Hollywood — 'Systemic Racism Won’t Change Anytime Soon'

  • All's Fair

    This is a test of slideshows

  • Police line in the forest at a crime scene

    We Demand Answers: Rasheem Carter's Body Was Found Decapitated In Mississippi Woods, Cops Say 'No Foul Play'

  • My Feet Are Killing Me

    TLC's 'My Feet Are Killing Me' Exclusive Clip: Dr. Ebonie Benevolently Blesses A Patient Whose Feet Were Mangled In A Car Crash [Video]

Jimmy Carter x Kamala Harris

Running On Hope: Jimmy Carter’s Son Says Former President Wants To Live Long Enough To Vote Kamala Harris

Home & Texture Launch Party

De’arra, Mattie James, Morgan DeBaun & More Stunners Shine At ‘Home & Texture’ Launch Party

BET Awards
6 Items

Who Looked More Bangin’ At The 2024 BET Awards?

Love Bossip? Get more! Join the Bossip Newsletter

Thank you for subscribing!

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

We care about your data. See our privacy policy.

Bossip

  • News
    • Celebrities
    • Viral Video
    • We See You
    • Sports
    • Bolitics
    • SMH
    • Jesus Take The Wheel
    • What the Hell???
  • Exclusives
  • Bossip TV
  • Tips

Quick Links

Legal

An Urban One Brand

Copyright © 2025 Bossip ® Copyright © 2019 BossipMadameNoire, LLC All Rights Reserved | BHM Digital. All Rights Reserved. Powered by WordPress VIP   |   An Urban One Brand
Close