- Ron's Big Mission
Author
Author
Illustrator
Type
Ages
Children's - Grade 1-2, Age 6-7
Pages
32 p. ;
Categories
JUVENILE NONFICTION / Social Issues / Prejudice & Racism, JUVENILE NONFICTION / History / United States / 20th Century
Subjects
African Americans, 1950-1986, McNair, Ronald E.,, Books and reading, Libraries, Childhood and youth, McNair, Ronald E.,, 1950-1986, Childhood and youth, Segregation, South Carolina, History, 20th century
Publisher
publisher summary(s)
One summer day in 1959, nine-year-old Ron McNair, who dreams of becoming a pilot, walks into the Lake City, South Carolina, public library and insists on checking out some books, despite the rule that only white people can have library cards.
Living in the segregated south of the 1950s, nine-year-old Ron uses peaceful resistance and personal determination to challenge the establishment in order to attain his own library card so he can check out the books he loves, in a moving story about a young boy who grows up to become a skilled scientist and Challenger astronaut.
Nine-year-old Ron loves going to the Lake City Public Library to look through all the books on airplanes and flight. Today, Ron is ready to take out books by himself. But in the segregated world of South Carolina in the 1950s, Ron's obtaining his own library card is not just a small rite of passage - it is a young man's fi rst courageous mission. Here is an inspiring story, based on Ron McNair's life, of how a little boy, future scientist, and Challenger astronaut desegregated his library through peaceful resistance.
