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Plessy V. Ferguson Case: Brown Vs. Board Of Education

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Often times, people of the twenty-first century forget that segregation was real, people do not realize the impact of segregation nor how powerful it was. Segregation was real, segregation was powerful, and segregation affected the lives of many, whites would harass anyone who was not of their color. People associate civil rights with Martin Luther King Jr., and although he sparked the Civil Rights movement, he should not be completely accredited for getting rid of segregation. Supreme Court cases have diminished segregation. The elimination of segregation was not immediate, but took decades to completely part with. Most people would agree that these three cases have stood out and made the most impact: Plessy v. Ferguson, Brown v. Board …show more content…

Ferguson was abolished during the Brown v. Board of education Supreme Court Case. During this case, the Supreme Court ruled that it was unconstitutional to separate children in schools by their race. This case could now guarantee that children of color would no longer have to go to different schools, this case put a legal end to refusal of segregation in schools. Brown v. Board of Education was considered a catalyst for "expanding civil rights movements during the decade of the 1950s." This case created hope for people of color, justice was beginning to be served, equality was finally becoming equality (Brown vs. Board of Education of …show more content…

Ferguson, Brown v. Board of Education, and Loving v. Virginia have made a visible impact on the way we live today and most people would agree that these three cases attracted the most attention. Plessy v. Ferguson created the "separate but equal" clause, meaning all blacks would have the same rights as whites but they would do it separated from the whites, this clause was eliminated by Brown v. Board of Education which also established that it was unconstitutional to separate children in schools by their race. Loving v. Virginia made it illegal for blacks and whites to intermarry, which violated the Equal Protection Clause. Racism will never fully diminish but segregation has, these cases have immensely impacted the views of many and their judgment on people of a different color. Without these crucial Supreme Court cases, our world would not be the same. “This nation was founded by men of many nations and backgrounds. It was founded on the principle that all men are created equal, and that the rights of every man are diminished when the rights of one man are threatened … It ought to to be possible, in short, for every American to enjoy the privileges of being American without regard to his race or his color.” —John F. Kennedy

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