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  1. Apr 18, 2007 · Diane Nash (1938- ) Civil rights activist Diane Judith Nash was born on May 15, 1938 in Chicago, Illinois to Leon Nash and Dorothy Bolton Nash. Nash grew up a Roman Catholic and attended parochial and public schools in Chicago. In 1956, she graduated from Hyde Park High School in Chicago, Illinois and began her college career at Howard ...

  2. Diane Judith Nash was born in 1938, in Chicago, Illinois. She was raised a Catholic and attended public and Catholic schools. Nash even considered becoming a nun. After graduating high school, she first attended Howard University in Washington, D.C., but transferred to Fisk University in Nashville in 1959. It was in Tennessee that Diane Nash first experienced the segregated South. She saw ...

  3. We honor Diane Judith Nash for reminding us of the power of love. Nash was on a date at the Tennessee State Fair in 1959 when she discovered segregated bathroom. A product of a middle-class Catholic upbringing in Chicago, this was the first time Nash had experienced the harsh realities of the Jim Crow south.

  4. Diane Nash. Born: May 15, 1938 (age 86) Diane Judith Nash is a civil rights activist who was a leader of the student wing of the Civil Rights Movement. Nash was born on May 15, 1938, in Chicago, Illinois. She began her college career at Howard University but transferred to Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee, after a year.

  5. Continuing her fight for justice, Diane Nash built upon her civil rights movement work by actively opposing the Vietnam War, and has continued to be involved in peace movements. A long-time educator in the Chicago public schools, she has also been a strong supporter of women’s rights, and has organized around tenant and welfare rights issues ...

  6. Jul 8, 2022 · Chicago native Diane Nash was awarded the nation’s highest civilian honor on Thursday by President Joe Biden in Washington, D.C. Nash was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom for her work ...

  7. Jan 27, 2017 · Diane Nash urges today’s activists to apply techniques of the Civil Rights Movement. Principles of nonviolence from the 1960s are the best strategy for today’s social movements, civil rights icon Diane Nash told a Battell Chapel audience the evening of Jan. 25. By Blake Thorkelson.

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