[3] The News & Observer photographed the two of them, and she told her son as they entered the school, "Hold your head up high and just count the steps.
[5] In the early 1960s, partly as a result of their efforts to enroll their children in traditionally segregated schools, June and Ralph began hosting meetings of civil rights activists at their home.
[1] When Bill ran for office in Atlanta in 1993, she moved there for several months to take care of his home and children while he and his wife campaigned.
[8] She was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in March 2004[7] and died due to complications stemming from the disease on August 19.
[9] The Campbells' oval table was later acquired by the North Carolina Museum of History, and in 2005 June and her husband were inducted into the Raleigh Hall of Fame.