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Hear Floridians Talk About Their Desegregation Experiences

Mamie Pinder holds a photograph of herself as a young teaching student. Pinder, a retired Miami-Dade school teacher, began teaching in 1963, the year the school district began merging black and white students bodies and faculty.
Emily Michot
/
Miami Herald
Mamie Pinder holds a photograph of herself as a young teaching student. Pinder, a retired Miami-Dade school teacher, began teaching in 1963, the year the school district began merging black and white students bodies and faculty.
Mamie Pinder holds a photograph of herself as a young teaching student. Pinder, a retired Miami-Dade school teacher, began teaching in 1963, the year the school district began merging black and white students bodies and faculty.
Credit Emily Michot / Miami Herald
/
Miami Herald
Mamie Pinder holds a photograph of herself as a young teaching student. Pinder, a retired Miami-Dade school teacher, began teaching in 1963, the year the school district began merging black and white students bodies and faculty.

This weekend marks the60thanniversary of Brown v. Board of Education — the Supreme Court decision declaring segregated schools were inherently unequal.A recent ProPublica investigation found at least 300 school districts that are still under court-ordered desegregation. Eleven of those districts are in Florida.

Even though Miami-Dade County had those desegregation orders lifted relatively recently in 2001, it was an early leader in desegregation, putting black and white children and black and white teachers in the same schools.

StateImpact Florida collected memories from some of those students and teachers. 

Note to listeners: this story contains strong language.

David Smiley and Emily Michot of the Miami Herald contributed to this story. Some of these stories came to us from the Public Insight Network, an online community of people who have agreed to share their opinions with The Miami Herald and WLRN. Become a news source for WLRN by going to WLRN.org/Insight.

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