Plessy

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    This essay will discuss Plessy vs. Ferguson, which was a case within the Unites States Supreme Court in which the constitutionality of the segregation laws of the South in public facilities was called into question. The trial stemmed from an incident in 1892 where Homer Plessy took a seat in the whites only railway car after being asked to move and sit instead in the blacks only car, he refused and was arrested immediately. In his case his lawyers argued that his Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendment

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    Primary Source Review: Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 US 537 Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 US 537 (1896) was a case in which Homer Plessy (1862-1925) challenged the Supreme Court. Plessy was an African American who had sat in the whites only car on a train. When he was told to go to the Jim Crow car he refused, which broke one of Louisiana's laws, the Separate Car Act. John H. Ferguson (1838-1915) was the judge of the Criminal Court of New Orleans. The defendant was trying to uphold the law that was being backed

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    Plessy vs. Ferguson impacted America in both unfortunate and strong ways. It all started in 1892 were a man named Homer Plessy refused to sit in a Jim Crow car that was for blacks only. According to the laws of Louisiana Homer broke one of their segregation laws. Even though Homer was 7/8 whites and 1/8 black he was still arrested and taken to jail. Plessy made a compliant that later on let to a case. Judge Ferguson ruled against his argument that making Plessy sit on a separate seat violated his

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    Plessy v Ferguson, 1896 Introduction In 1890, the Separate Car Act was enacted in the state of Louisiana requiring whites and non-white Americans to travel in separate railway cars. As a result, a passenger, Homer Adolph Plessy took a seat in a “whites only” car in one of the Louisiana trains and refused to move to the “blacks only” car and was subsequently arrested despite being only a eighth black. In the case Plessy v. Ferguson, 1896 took place during the era of Jim Crow laws which advocated

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    Plessy V. Ferguson was a court case that took place in 1896 in New Orleans. This case was held due to an incident in which African American train passenger Homer Plessy refused to sit in a Jim Crow Car where at the time in Louisiana, all colored people had to by law, which required separation of both whites and colored people. This action resulted in Plessy’s arrest in 1890. Even though Plessy argued that this violated his constitutional rights, the court ruled that a state law that “states merely

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    The two cases that went all the way to the Supreme Court were the Plessy v. Ferguson and the Brown v. The Board of Education. During these cases there were strong disagreements about racial segregation and how people shouldn’t be based on color. These two cases were based off the 14th Amendment of how people shouldn’t be judged. During the Plessy v. Ferguson case, there was a act called the Separate Car Act in 1890 which white and blacks had to be separated into different railroad cars. During the

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    Plessy v. Ferguson What were the facts in the case? Homer Plessy was a resident of the State of Louisiana and was of a mixed decent. Plessy believed that being mostly of a white decent; he was entitled to the rights and privileges granted to white citizens by the Constitution. On June 7, 1892, he bought a ticket in Louisiana and boarded a train in New Orleans. Plessy sat in an all-white second onboard the rail car. After being asked by the conductor to move to the non-white section of the train

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    Plessy vs. Ferguson Plessy v. Ferguson , a very important case of 1896 in which the Supreme Court of the United States upheld the legality of racial segregation. At the time of the ruling, segregation between blacks and whites already existed in most schools, restaurants, and other public facilities in the American South. In the Plessy decision, the Supreme Court ruled that such segregation did not violate the 14th Amendment of the Constitution of the United States. This amendment provides

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    discrimination . The impact of the Plessy decision would lead to even more segregate public places including our topic the schools. In a brave lonely single dissent, Justice John Marshall Harlan asserted that the Constitution was “color‐blind.” Ironically, Justice Harlan was a former slave holding Southerner too. Largely ignored at the time, Plessy would become the favored precedent for a long line of “separate, but equal” decisions upholding racially driven separation of society. The separate

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    In 1892, the Plessy v. Ferguson case had emerged from a conflict from Louisiana’s Separate Car Act. The law required that railroads have “separate but equal accommodations,” prohibiting African American and White passengers from entering besides the one they were assigned to based on race. Homer Plessy, a seven-eighths White and one-eighth African American bought a rail travel ticket in Louisiana for the White car and took a seat. He was later told to move to the African American car, after refusing

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