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FILE - In this June 19, 2015 file photo, Paul McCartney performs on Day 2 of the 2015 Firefly Music Festival at The Woodlands in Dover, Del. McCartney gave a private performance in Philadelphia last Sunday, Oct. 18, 2015 during the American Trucking Association’s Management Conference and Exhibition. McCartney changed the lyrics to the Beatles song “Drive My Car” to play to the crowd of about 1,000. (Photo by Owen Sweeney/Invision/AP) Image Credit: Owen Sweeney/Invision/AP

Paul McCartney says he met with two of the women who integrated Little Rock’s Central High School, saying the 1957 crisis inspired the Beatles’ hit song Blackbird.

McCartney performed on Saturday to a sold-out crowd in North Little Rock, Arkansas. Afterward, McCartney’s Instagram and Facebook accounts posted a photo of him with Elizabeth Eckford and Thelma Mothershed Wair, two members of the Little Rock Nine.

The photo described the women as “pioneers of the civil rights movement and inspiration for Blackbird.” McCartney told concertgoers Saturday that he followed the desegregation struggles from England and that he wanted to write a song in support.

The nine black students integrated Central High School in September 1957 after President Dwight Eisenhower sent in federal troops to escort them into the school.