[1] She grew up in a middle-class black family; her parents Christopher and Maud Burey worked in catering in the city.
Buster also worked at the NAACP and the Legal Defense Fund, alongside other civil rights activists such as Edward W. Jacko and Jawn A.
[3] She hid her sickness from her husband for months, as he was leading the case of Brown v. Board of Education at the US Supreme Court.
[10] Marshall's husband remarried in December 1955, to Cecilia Suyat, a woman who worked as a secretary at the NAACP Legal Defense Fund.
[12] It serves students grades 6–10 in the Baltimore, Maryland, and Vicksburg, Mississippi, areas with a focus on Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) learning programs.