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Brown vs. Board of Education

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Read the description of the Brown vs. Board of Education Supreme Court Case.

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Âge recommandé: 7 ans
165 fois fait

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United States

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Brown vs. Board of EducationVersion en ligne

Read the description of the Brown vs. Board of Education Supreme Court Case.

par Agoston Szabo
1

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In the early 1950s , Linda was a young African American student in the Topeka , Kansas school district . Every day she and her sister , Terry Lynn , had to walk through the Rock Island Railroad Switchyard to get to the stop for the ride to the all - black Monroe School . Linda Brown tried to gain to the Sumner School , which was closer to her house , but her was denied by the Board of Education of Topeka because of her race . The Sumner School was for children only .
Under the laws of the time , many public facilities were by race . The precedent - setting Plessy v . Ferguson case , which was decided by the Court of the United States in 1896 , allowed for such segregation . In that case , a black man , Homer , challenged a Louisiana law that required railroad companies to provide equal , but , accommodations for the white and African American races . He claimed that the Louisiana law violated the Amendment , which demands that states provide " equal protection of the laws . " However , the Supreme Court of the United States held that as long as segregated facilities were qualitatively equal , segregation did not violate the Fourteenth Amendment . In doing so , the Court classified segregation as a matter of social , out of the control of the system concerned with maintaining legal equality . The Court stated , " If one race be inferior to the other socially , the constitution of the United States cannot put them on the same plane . "
At the time of the Brown case , a Kansas statute , but did not , cities of more than 15 , 000 people to maintain separate school for black and white students . On that basis , the Board of Education of Topeka elected to establish segregated elementary schools . Other public schools in the community were operated on a , or unitary , basis .
At the time of the Brown case , a Kansas statute permitted , but did not require , cities of more than 15 , 000 people to maintain separate school facilities for and students . On that basis , the Board of Education of Topeka elected to establish segregated elementary schools . Other public schools in the community were operated on a nonsegregated , or , basis .
The Browns felt that the decision of the Board violated the Constitution . They sued the Board of Education of Topeka , alleging that the segregated school system Linda Brown of the equal protection of the laws required under the Fourteenth Amendment .
No State shall . . . to any person within its the equal protection of the laws .
? Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the U . S . Constitution
Thurgood Marshall , an for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People ( ) , argued the Brown's case . Marshall would later become a Supreme Court justice .
The three - judge federal district court found that segregation in public education had a effect upon black children , but the court denied that there was any violation of Brown's rights because of the " separate but equal " doctrine established in the Supreme Court's 1896 Plessy decision . The court found that the schools were substantially equal with respect to buildings , transportation , curricula , and educational qualifications of teachers . The Browns appealed their case to the Supreme Court of the United States , claiming that the segregated schools were not equal and could never be made equal . The Court combined the case with several similar cases from South Carolina , Virginia , and Delaware . The ruling in the Brown v . Board of Education case came in 1954 .

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