The story behind the coin
In September 1957, nine Black teenagers tried to walk into Little Rock Central High School in Arkansas. The Supreme Court had already ruled, in Brown v. Board of Education (1954), that segregated schools were unconstitutional. The students had the law on their side. They still couldn't get through the door.
Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus ordered the state's National Guard to physically block them. A mob gathered outside. For weeks the standoff held — a state government using soldiers to keep children out of a school, broadcast to the country on the evening news. Then President Dwight D. Eisenhower did something no president had done since Reconstruction: he federalized the Arkansas Guard and sent in the U.S. Army's 101st Airborne Division. On September 25, 1957, paratroopers escorted the nine students up the steps and inside.
They are remembered as the Little Rock Nine. The crisis became one of the defining images of the civil rights era — and a hard, public test of whether federal law meant anything against a state that refused it. This coin marks the 50th anniversary of that day.
