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Good for Thurgood!

LEVELED BOOK • Q
A Reading A–Z Level Q Leveled Book
Word Count: 894
Good for Thurgood!

N •Q
K •

Written by Marvin Bird

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Good for Thurgood!
Photo Credits:
Front cover, pages 10, 12: © AP Images; back cover, 15: © U.S. Postal Service,
George Nikitin/AP Images; title page: © dbimages/Alamy; page 5: © The Granger
Collection, NYC; page 8: © Corbis; pages 11, 14: © Bettmann/Corbis; page 13:
© Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP Images

Title page: Thurgood Marshall statue in Annapolis, Maryland

Good for Thurgood!


Level Q Leveled Book
© Learning A–Z Correlation
Written by Marvin Bird LEVEL Q
Illustrated by Blain Hefner
Fountas & Pinnell N
Written by Marvin Bird All rights reserved. Reading Recovery 30
www.readinga-z.com www.readinga-z.com
DRA 30
Thurgood Marshall was born in 1908
in Baltimore, Maryland. He was African
American, and his grandfather was a former
slave.

By the time Thurgood was born, it was In the South, black people were not
against the law to own slaves. Thurgood grew allowed to eat in many restaurants that served
up with both black and white neighbors, but white people. They were not allowed to sit in
in many states, people were segregated. the same train cars as white people.

Good for Thurgood! • Level Q 3 4


Do You Know?
Thurgood was originally named
Black children attend an all-black school in Kentucky in 1916.
“Thoroughgood.” Because he didn’t
like having to spell it, he shortened
Black children in the South were not his name to Thurgood in second
allowed to go to school with white children. grade. His nickname was “Goody.”
They couldn’t even drink from the same water
fountains.
In fact, those places were not equal, and
Yet the Supreme Court—the highest court those laws were unfair. At the dinner table,
in the land—had made segregation legal. It Thurgood’s family used to argue about what
decided that those restaurants, trains, schools, to do about those laws. Thurgood became
parks, and hotels were “separate but equal.” very good at arguing.

Good for Thurgood! • Level Q 5 6


Thurgood liked pranks and got into his fair
share of trouble growing up. His punishment
in high school was often to memorize the U.S.
Constitution. “Before I left that school, I knew
the whole thing by heart,” he later said. Yet
some of the ideas in the Constitution did not
hold true in his own life.

Thurgood thought the rights in the


Constitution should apply to everyone.

He felt that the laws in some states


that segregated African Americans went
against the ideas and laws put forth in the
Constitution. He realized that by becoming
a lawyer, he could use the law to help African Marshall (standing) gets ready for court in 1935.
Americans achieve equality.
The next year, he began to work as a
After graduating from an all-black college, lawyer. In 1936, he won his first big victory
Marshall wanted to attend the University of for civil rights. It was against the University
Maryland Law School. Because of his race, of Maryland Law School—the same school
the school would not let him in. Instead, he that Marshall had wanted to attend. Another
went to the all-black law school at Howard black student had also been denied admission
University. He graduated at the top of his to the law school because of his race. That
class in 1933. student took the school to court, saying that
the school’s discrimination was illegal.
Marshall argued the case and won.

Good for Thurgood! • Level Q 7 8


In 1954, Marshall argued his most
important case of all, Brown v. Board of
Education. At that time, many states spent far
less money on black students than on white
students. Black children in those states had
to attend all-black schools, even when they
lived miles closer to an all-white school.
Black students in crowded schools were not
allowed to attend white schools with empty
classrooms. In many places, they could not
ride buses to school, even when a bus for
white children passed their door every day.

Marshall argued that it was unfair to have


separate schools for black children and white
Marshall was just thirty-two when he children. He argued that “separate was not
began arguing cases before the Supreme equal.” The only way to gain equality was to
Court. In one case, he argued against allow children of all races to attend the same
segregated neighborhoods. He said that public schools.
people of other races should be allowed to
In 1951, the closest elementary
purchase homes in white neighborhoods. school to Linda Brown in Topeka,
Marshall argued another case about Kansas, was four blocks from her
home. Yet because the school was
segregation on buses and trains. He said that
all-white, Brown could not attend.
black and white people should be able to ride Her father, Oliver Brown, started
together. Marshall won these and many other the lawsuit that became Brown v. Linda Brown in
Board of Education. 1952, at age 9
cases for civil rights.

Good for Thurgood! • Level Q 9 10


Marshall traveled a lot in order to argue for the rights of black Americans.

In all, Marshall argued thirty-two cases


Marshall’s work helped make it possible for black, white, and Latino
students to all say the Pledge of Allegiance together. before the Supreme Court and won twenty-
nine of them. He became the first African
Marshall won his case. Every justice
American to argue cases for the U.S.
on the Supreme Court voted to end school
government before the Supreme Court.
segregation. That decision helped end other
kinds of segregation in the United States as In 1967, President Lyndon Johnson chose
well. It inspired the civil rights movement, Marshall to be a justice on the Supreme Court.
which took place over the next decade. It also He became the first African American to ever
made Marshall famous. serve on the highest court of the United States.

Good for Thurgood! • Level Q 11 12


Thurgood Marshall smiles before
Who Serves on the Supreme Court? becoming the first black member
of the Supreme Court in 1967.

Justice Marshall still got to argue a lot,


and he always argued to make things fair.
He upheld the rights of prisoners, children,
women, and homeless people.

Justices serve on the Supreme Court for


The nine justices of the U.S. Supreme Court gather for a portrait life. Justice Marshall wanted to stay on the
in October 2010.
court as long as he could so that his voice
For many years, only white men served on the would continue to be heard. Marshall served
Supreme Court. Of the nine justices, there were on the court for twenty-four years. In 1991, at
no women and no people of color. Because the age eighty-three, he retired.
president appoints each justice for life, it took
At that time, reporters asked him if black
a long time to make things more equal. The first
people were better off than when he’d joined
change came when Thurgood Marshall became a
the court.
justice in 1967. Then the first woman, Sandra Day
O’Connor, was appointed in 1981. In 2013, one “All Americans are better off since I joined
African American man and three women served the Court,” Marshall said. “All of them.”
on the court, including one Latina woman.
He died two years later.

Good for Thurgood! • Level Q 13 14


Glossary
civil rights (n.) legal, social, and economic rights
that guarantee freedom and
equality for all citizens (p. 8)

Constitution (n.) the written rules that govern the


United States (p. 7)

discrimination (n.) the unfair treatment of a person


or group based on gender, race,
age, religion, or other differences
(p. 8)

equality (n.) the condition in which everyone


Cecilia Marshall, widow of Thurgood Marshall, unveils a new postage stamp has the same rights (p. 7)
honoring her husband in 2002.
justice (n.) a judge (p. 11)
Marshall believed in the American legal
race (n.) a group of humans as defined
system. He believed that it was the root of by their skin color and other
equality in the country and that only the law physical features (p. 7)
would bring permanent change. He thought
segregated (adj.) kept apart on the basis of group
the right laws could even change the minds differences, such as race (p. 3)
and hearts of some people.
South (n.) the southeastern part of
Thurgood Marshall changed the country the United States, especially
states that formed part of the
not just for African Americans but for people
Confederacy during the Civil War
of all races. His ideas about the Constitution (p. 4)
advanced justice, freedom, and opportunity
Supreme Court (n.) the highest court of law in the
for all Americans.
judicial system of the United
Good for Thurgood! States (p. 5)

Good for Thurgood! • Level Q 15 16

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