Skip to main content

Leadership Conference on Civil Rights

Civilrights.org: The Civil Rights coalition for the 21st century. Over 180 national organizations strong.
Founded by LCCR and LCCREF
Issues

Search This Site

www.civilrights.org > Press Room > Buzz Clips
Enforcement of Civil Rights Laws
Why You Should Care
Buzz Clip | Article
Mildred Loving, Who Fought Marriage Ban, Dies

Email to friend
Printer Friendly
Related Links
Douglas Martin
The New York Times
May 6, 2008

Mildred Loving, a black woman whose anger over being banished from Virginia for marrying a white man led to a landmark Supreme Court ruling overturning state miscegenation laws, died on May 2 at her home in Central Point, Va. She was 68.

Peggy Fortune, her daughter, said the cause was pneumonia.

The Supreme Court ruling, in 1967, struck down the last group of segregation laws to remain on the books — those requiring separation of the races in marriage. The ruling was unanimous, its opinion written by Chief Justice Earl Warren, who in 1954 wrote the court's opinion in Brown v. Board of Education, declaring segregated public schools unconstitutional.


© 2008 Leadership Conference on Civil Rights/Leadership Conference on Civil Rights Education Fund. All rights reserved.
1629 K Street NW, 10th Floor, Washington, DC 20006