Every day, 8-year-old Sylvia Mendez and her friends got off the school bus in front of 17th Street Elementary School. It was 1944 in Westminster, California. The large, clean building had plenty of room for its students. It even had a playground.
“It had swings, monkey bars, a teeter-totter,” Sylvia, who is now 84, recalls.
But only white kids went there. Sylvia wasn’t allowed in because she was Mexican American. She had to walk down the street to Hoover Elementary. It was small, run-down, and overcrowded. There was no playground, only a dirt lot.
Sylvia’s family and her community spoke out against this unfairness in order to end school segregation.