Martin Elementary School classroom

How Ruby Bridges Day Went Statewide

Ruby Bridges Walk to School Day became a statewide observance on November 17, 2021, thanks to the efforts of Deborah Carlino's fifth grade students at Martin Elementary School in South San Francisco Unified School District and all the friends and supporters they picked up over the last four years. Join us as we celebrate this inspiring Civil Rights icon ever year. #GoRuby
Current and former students of Deborah Carlino’s fifth grade class at Martin Elementary School in South San Francisco Unified School District (SSFUSD) hailed the California state senate’s vote to designate November 14 as Ruby Bridges Day throughout the state of California. 

"This is incredible,” said Carlino, while watching the senate proceedings from her classroom with her students on September 10. “It’s a culmination of more than three years’ worth of teaching and learning and campaigning.” 

According to Carlino, her class of fifth graders in 2017 wanted to find a way to recognize the contributions of Ruby Bridges after learning how she had helped integrate William Frantz Elementary School in New Orleans in 1960 as a six-year-old. 

“I asked Mrs. Carlino do we have a day to celebrate Ruby Bridges,” said Madeline Popielak, a fifth grader during the 2017-18 school year who is now a freshman at South San Francisco High School.

When Madeline and her classmates discovered there was none, they decided to start a petition to establish one.

“So they [the students] went out and collected over 1,000 signatures,” said Carlino. “They took these signatures, and they went before the school board in South San Francisco, and they requested that every November 14 would be Ruby Bridges Day, and it was unanimously voted through.” 
 
The next year, the students took their petition to the City of South San Francisco and the San Mateo County Office of Education (SMCOE) with similar results.
 
Afterwards, public schools throughout the county, a few in California, and some in states like Colorado began observing Ruby Bridges Walk to School Day on November 14, the date that Bridges first entered William Frantz Elementary School in the company of U.S. marshals.
 
Now, thanks to a resolution sponsored by California State Senator Josh Becker, the Golden State is looking to make things official. 
 
“We are proud of the way our students and teachers have applied the lessons of civic responsibility and political activism to carry this cause forward,” said SSFUSD Superintendent Dr. Shawnterra Moore. “The state proclamation is quite an honor.” 
 
Mrs. Carlino said the story of Ruby Bridges resonates with students, because it shows that children have the power to change the world. 

“She [Ruby Bridges] has inspired children in my class, in my school, in our community to reach out and make a difference,” said Carlino. “Her life, her sacrifices, her choices so long ago are still inspiring people to stand up and be great people.”