The Highest Tribute: Thurgood Marshall's Life, Leadership, And Legacy

ISBN-10: 0062912518
ISBN-13: 9780062912510
Author: Magoon, Kekla
Illustrated by: Freeman, Laura
Interest Level: P-3
Publisher: HarperCollins

Publication Date: January 2021

Copyright: 2021

Page Count: 40

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Hardcover
$14.39
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Interest Level

Grades P-3

Reading Level

Accelerated Reader Level: 5.4
Accelerated Reader Points: 0.5

BISAC Subjects

JUVENILE NONFICTION / Biography & Autobiography / Historical

JUVENILE NONFICTION / People & Places / United States / African American

JUVENILE NONFICTION / Law & Crime

Description
Growing up, Thurgood Marshall saw that things weren?t fair. Baltimore, his hometown, was segregated - laws said Black and white people couldn?t use the same resources, like schools, parks, or water fountains. When Thurgood had to read the Constitution as punishment for a prank at school, his eyes were opened. Thurgood knew Jim Crow laws were wrong, and he was willing to do whatever it took to change them. His determination to make all Americans equal led him to law school and then the NAACP, where he argued cases like Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka in front of the Supreme Court before Lyndon Johnson appointed him as a justice. But to get to the highest court in the land, Thurgood had to make space for himself every step of the way.