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Interracial couples in the US owe it to her
Mildred Loving, who fought landmark legal battle to have her marriage with a white man upheld, dies aged 68.
- Mildred Loving and her husband Richard P. Loving are shown in this January 26, 1965 file photograph.
- Image Credit: AP
Richmond, Virginia: Mildred Loving, a black woman whose challenge to Virginia's ban on interracial marriage led to a landmark Supreme Court ruling striking down such laws across the United States, has died, her daughter said on Monday.
Peggy Fortune said Loving, 68, died on Friday at her home in rural Milford. She did not disclose the cause of death.
Loving and her white husband, Richard, changed history in 1967 when the US Supreme Court upheld their right to marry. The ruling struck down laws banning racially mixed marriages in at least 17 states. They had married in Washington in 1958, when she was 18.
Returning to their Virginia hometown, they were arrested within weeks and convicted on charges of "cohabiting as man and wife, against the peace and dignity of the Commonwealth", according to their indictments.
The couple avoided a year in jail by agreeing to a sentence mandating that they immediately leave Virginia.
They moved to Washington and launched a legal challenge a few years later.
After the Supreme Court ruled, the couple returned to Virginia, where they lived with their children Donald, Peggy and Sidney.
God's work
Richard Loving died in 1975 in a car accident that also injured his wife.
In a rare interview last June, Loving said she was not trying to change history - she was just a girl who fell in love with a boy.
"It wasn't my doing," Loving said. "It was God's work."
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