Leola Bullock held a vigil on the lawn of the Governor's Mansion in April 1999 to support a moratorium of the death penalty.
Journal Star file photo
Led by Leola Bullock (center) and Jerry Behringer (right), Nebraska's first civil rights demonstrators conduct a solemn and orderly march through downtown Lincoln in June 1963.
Journal Star file photo
Local NAACP leader Leola Bullock stands with marchers on the state Capitol steps during Nebraska's first rally in 1963, nine days after the assassination of national NAACP leader Medgar Evers.
Journal Star file photo
The Rev. Everett Reynolds and Leola Bullock lead marchers during a 1963 civil rights march in Lincoln.
Journal Star file photo
Pete Ferguson, youth development coordinator for Lincoln Public Schools, talks in 2015 about an art project that depicts civil rights leaders such as Leola Bullock (from left), Ruby Bridges and Rev. Martin Luther King.
GWYNETH ROBERTS/Journal Star file photo
Lincoln civil rights activist Leola Bullock is among the leaders chosen for portraits.
Led by Leola Bullock (center) and Jerry Behringer (right), Nebraska's first civil rights demonstrators conduct a solemn and orderly march through downtown Lincoln in June 1963.
Local NAACP leader Leola Bullock stands with marchers on the state Capitol steps during Nebraska's first rally in 1963, nine days after the assassination of national NAACP leader Medgar Evers.
Pete Ferguson, youth development coordinator for Lincoln Public Schools, talks in 2015 about an art project that depicts civil rights leaders such as Leola Bullock (from left), Ruby Bridges and Rev. Martin Luther King.