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  1. Daisy Bates was not born to make history. The product of a segregated Arkansas sawmill town, she was black, illegitimate and self-taught after the eighth grade. Bates’s early life was scarred ...

  2. Daisy Bates (1859–1951) is a contentious and eccentric figure in Australian history who spent many years conducting ethnographic and welfare work in outback Australia. The National Museum’s collection includes a black skirt and ribbed-sleeve top owned by Bates and a signed first edition copy of her 1938 book, The Passing of the Aborigines ...

  3. Bates, Daisy. November 11, 1914 to November 4, 1999. Daisy Lee Gaston Bates, a civil rights advocate, newspaper publisher, and president of the Arkansas chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), advised the nine students who desegregated Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1957.

  4. 1. Dez. 2006 · Extract. Grif Stockley's biography of Daisy Bates depicts an assertive activist who, in a departure from traditional expectations of women's roles, did not confine her place in the freedom movement to the unseen yet vital organizing activities that historians have associated with black female participants. As president of the Arkansas State ...

  5. 21. Sept. 2007 · Daisy Bates helped recruit them, bright kids the school board couldn't turn down. "I've known Ms. Bates since I was probably two years old and I was a paper carrier for their newspaper from the ...

  6. 7. Feb. 2020 · Daisy Bates was an activist and journalist who dedicated her life to challenging the inequality of races during the Civil Rights Movement, especially segrega...

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  7. unknown. D aisy Bates is an African American civil rights activist and newspaper publisher. Through her newspaper, Bates documented the battle to end segregation in Arkansas. For her amazing career in social activism, we celebrate her as an American hero. B ates was born, Daisy Gaston, in Huttig, Arkansas on November 11, 1914.