Plessy v. Ferguson Essay

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    Brown v. Board of Education Brown v. Board of Education was a court case that decided segregation was illegal. When it was taken to court, it followed other similar court cases about segregation and education. In court, five cases were combined under the name of Brown v. Board of Education. The Trip to Brown It all started with slavery in the United States, which was especially popular in the early 1790s with enslaved African Americans working the new cotton gins. After the Civil War

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    Brown v. Board of Education is a story of triumph over a society where separating races simply based on appearances was the law. It is a story of two little girls who has to walk through a railroad switchyard in Topeka, Kansas in 1950 just to attend school. With lunch bags and backpacks in hand, they make their way to the black bus stop which is a distance of the tracks. They have to walk this distance, pass the buses filled with white children because they are unable to attend the nearby white

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    The 13th Amendment

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    thirteenth and fifteenth amendments made it constitution for African Americans to vote it did not prohibit states from implementing obstructions at voting booths such as poll taxes, literacy test, lineage tracking, and other qualifications. While Plessy v. Ferguson established the separate but equal doctrine which is described as “racially segregated but ostensibly ensuring equal opportunities to all races.” The established doctrine of Separate but Equal was never enforced, and the cries of the neglected

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    The Fourteenth Amendment declared citizenship for, “all persons born or naturalized in the United States” and “forbids states from denying any person life, liberty or property, without due process of law” (“Primary Documents in American History” 1). Due process of law means individuals have to be given a fair trial before the government takes away their rights as a citizen. The reason Congress wanted to pass this bill was because they wanted to ensure fair civil and legal rights to African Americans

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    Segregation In History

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    segregation was Plessy v Ferguson and Brown v Board of Education. Plessy v Ferguson dealt with segregation in public places, Brown v Board of Education had to do with segregation in schools, and the Supreme Courts decision on these cases changed the course of history in America. In 1892 a man by the name of Homer Plessy was traveling in a train. There was one problem though, Homer Plessy was not in the “Jim Crow” car. The Jim Crow car was a railroad car that only blacks sat in. Homer Plessy was breaking

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    Free Speech Importance

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    The right to free speech is deemed important in the lives of many people. This importance of the right to free speech does not only apply democratic countries such as the United States of America, but also for the people fighting to have their voices heard. There are many places within our world where people do not have the right to share their own voice and ideas. Throughout the world, people’s voices are oppressed and silenced simply because their ideas may differ from the rules of the powerful

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    1890’s segregation started to become more common and white people felt superior to other races, especially African Americans. White people believed, black people did not deserve the rights and respect that they had. Homer Plessy, the so called wrongdoer in the Plessy vs Ferguson case, was seven-eighths white and one-eighths black, and he had an appearance of a white man. On June 7, 1892, he purchased a railroad ticket from New Orleans to Covington La, and sat in an empty seat in a whites only car

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    The Brown V Board of Education case overturned provisions of the Plessy v Ferguson decision of 1896 which allowed “separate but equal” in all public areas including public schools. This case began a spark in the American Civil Rights Movement by demanding public facilities to allow African Americans the same privileges as whites. This case ended tolerance of racial segregation, however, the decision did not succeed in fully desegregating public education, but it definitely started a revolution. In

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    Act Of 1964

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    Supreme Court. It wasn't only race that the civil rights act of 1964 ended it also ended segregation in race, color, religion, sex or national origin. The Civil rights act was a big movement effecting so many people: Dred Scott v. Sanford, Plessy v. Furguson, and Brown v. Board of education. In 1846 a slave named

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    as well. The struggle to achieve equality was made even more difficult by the legislation of racism in the Plessy v. Ferguson case. In the 1950s, after the dispersion of the Reconstruction era, the Jim Crow laws were created. A Jim Crow law was any law that enforced racial segregation in the South. Part of the development of the Jim Crow laws was

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