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Little Princess Dollhouses
Ruby Bridges
This Dollhouse is Included in Volume Two of the Little Princess Series of Dollhouses!
A makeCNC Original 3D Puzzle
This is a Very Amazing Puzzle with Some Finely detailed work in it!
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Ready to cut downloadable Patterns and Projects for your CNC Router, Milling Machine, Plasma Cutter or Laser Machine and Scroll Saw in both Imperial Inch format as well as Metric size for the Global CNC Hobbyist.
Files include a Full Color Assembly Manual Copyright makeCNC!
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Ruby Bridges
Ruby Bridges (1954-)
Ruby Bridges became the face of school integration at age six.
Ruby Bridges was born on September 8, 1954. She was born to Lucille and Abon Bridges, who had four other children, giving Ruby three brothers and one sister. At age two, Ruby and her family moved from Tylertown, Mississippi, where her family had been sharecroppers, to New Orleans, Louisiana, because her parents sought better work opportunities.
In New Orleans, Ruby went to a segregated kindergarten. However, the U.S. Supreme Court had ruled in 1954, the year that Ruby was born, that all schools must desegregate. The decision was made in the case of Brown vs. the Topeka Board of Education, when the parents of another grade-school girl, Linda Brown, sued the school system of Topeka, Kansas, because Linda had to attend an all-black school outside of the neighborhood where she lived.
The law was put into place in Louisiana at the beginning of Ruby’s first grade year. Ruby and five other African-American girls were given the opportunity to attend a school made up of only Caucasians, after they passed psychological and educational tests. Ruby’s parents were faced with a critical decision.
For this reason, Lucille wanted to send Ruby to the new school. Lucille wanted to give her daughter the opportunities she never had, but Abon, Ruby’s father, was not eager to send Ruby to the new school because he did not want to endanger his family. Over time, though, Lucille convinced Abon that sending Ruby to the new school would be the best thing to do.
After some time, integration was accepted by the community and more and more students, both black and white, enrolled in the school. Ruby, being the first black American to integrate William Frantz School paved the way for others -- including her four nieces, who attended the same school years after Ruby walked those very same halls. Ruby also graduated from a desegregated high school, where she studied travel and tourism and later became a travel agent. She later married, took the name Ruby Bridges Hall, and had four sons.
In 1999, at the age of 45, Ruby Bridges established The Ruby Bridges Foundation. The foundation “promotes and encourages the values of tolerance, respect, and appreciation of all differences.” The foundation’s goal is to create change through education and inspiration of children and to eliminate racism. The foundation’s motto is: “We believe racism is a grown-up disease and we must stop using our children to spread it.” Ruby remains an activist in the fight for equal rights.
Collect your Ruby Bridges Little Princess Dollhouse Today!
Patterns may be scaled to the size you require for your material thickness using our Scale Calculator
CNC Routers Users ! Please See our Tutorial for information on dealing with Inside Corners and Dogbone Fillets
Each Zip File Includes:
2 or 4 CDR Files - Sizes you receive Depend on individual Product - usually in 1-8 and 3 mm and/or 1-4 and 6 mm Versions (Corel Draw Format for Laser)
2 or 4 DXF's - Sizes you receive Depend on individual Product - usually in 1-8 and 3 mm and/or 1-4 and 6 mm Versions (For Most CAD Programs)
2 or 4 SVG - Sizes you receive Depend on individual Product - usually in 1-8 and 3 mm and/or 1-4 and 6 mm Versions (Opens in Many CAD & Drawing Programs)
Printable PDF Pattern (For Scroll Saw Use)
1 X Clear and Concise Color Assembly Manual.
1 X Number Guide DXF (Also called Coded DXF - NOT in all Products - Only in Certain Products)
1 x Readme File and Copyright Information
1 X Product Notes - Letting you know an Approximate Height, Length and Width of your finished product and giving the Approximate Size of the Largest Part. These Approximations are given in Imperial and Metric. Remember, These are Approximate Sizes.
Approximate Size at 3mm
L= 348
W = 216
H = 312
Approximate Size at 1/8 inch
L = 13.7
W = 8.5
H = 12.3
Approximate Size of Largest Part
12 X 10.7 inches
305 X 272 mm
Approximate Part Number: 52
NOTE: Our 3D Puzzles can be built in different thicknesses.
Example: 1/8" uses 1/8" Plywood...1/4" uses 1/4" Plywood, etc.
As a rule, although the slots are set to fit the same sized tool, most
people will use a smaller bit size when cutting.
All the hard work is done!
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