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Published byGwendoline Martin Modified over 8 years ago
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Warm-up: What was the court’s decision in the Plessy vs. Ferguson in 1896? What case overthrew that decision in Brown vs. Board case in 1954?
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Separate but Equal NOT!!!!!
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After World War 2, the African American’s civil rights movement accelerated In 1954, many of the nation’s school systems were segregated. The NAACP decided to challenge school segregation in the federal courts. African American attorney Thurgood Marshall led the NAACP legal team in Brown v. Board of Education.
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Written by Chief Justice Earl Warren, the Brown v. Board of Education decision said: Segregated public education violated the Fourteenth Amendment. “Separate but equal” had no place in public education. Overthrew the 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson separate but equal doctrine
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The Brown v. Board of Education ruling was significant and controversial. Schools could not longer segregate because separate was not equal About 100 white Southern members of Congress opposed the decision; in 1956 they endorsed “The Southern Manifesto” to lawfully oppose Brown. In a second decision, Brown II, the courts urged implementation of the decision “with all deliberate speed” across the nation.
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Some civil rights activists took direct action. In Montgomery, Alabama, Rosa Parks was arrested for refusing to give up her bus seat to a white person. This sparked a boycott to integrate public transportation. The black community walked or carpooled to work rather than take public transportation. The Montgomery bus boycott launched the modern civil rights movement.
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Martin Luther King, Jr. In 1956, the Supreme Court ruled that segregated busing was unconstitutional and the boycott ended. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s inspiring speech at a boycott meeting propelled him into the leadership of the nonviolent civil rights movement. The black community continued its bus boycott for more than a year despite threats and violence.
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It proved that they could work together and demand change. It inspired King and Ralph Abernathy, another Montgomery minister, to establish the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) to continue the nonviolent struggle for civil rights. The bus boycott was a tremendous and exciting victory for African Americans. But even with these victories, discrimination and segregation remained widespread.
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The Brown decision also met resistance on the local and state level. In Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1957, nine African American students tried to enter Central High. President Eisenhower had to send in the Arkansas National Guard to enforce the Brown decision of segregation. Elizabeth Eckford tries to enter Central High.
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Another Desegregation Test James Meredith wanted to enroll in the University of Mississippi— “Ole Miss” in 1962 since federal government ordered schools to desegregate in 1962 Governor Barnett denied to allow Meredith admission going against federal law and the Supreme Court President Kennedy moved slowly on civil rights issues at first to avoid offending southern Democratic senators but had to intervene on this issue when riots broke out on campus
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