Mr. Beat presents
Supreme Court Briefs
Topeka, KS 1950
Schools were segregated by skin color.
Each day, 8-year old Linda Brown and her sister had to walk one mile, crossing several busy railroad tracks along the way, to get to a bus that led them to school across town.
Now, an elementary school already existed just four blocks from their home, but this school was for white children only,
and Linda Brown and her sister were African American.
Linda's father, Oliver Brown, tried to enroll her in the white only elementary school, but the principal of the school wouldn't allow it.
So Brown to the Topeka's branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, or NAACP, and asked for help.
The NAACP had actually already been planning on challenging segregation in public schools.
The organization helped 12 other African American parents attempt to enroll their children in whites-only schools in the Topeka school district.
A major goal of the NAACP was to bring down the precedent set up by Plessy v. Ferguson
the 1896 Supreme Court decision that said segregated facilities based on skin color was ok, as long as both facilities were the same quality.
This became known as the "separate but equal" doctrine.
The NAACP helped Brown and the rest of the parents sue the Board of Education of the city of Topeka after the district continued to refuse to let their children enroll in whites-only schools.
The parents claimed their children's rights
as protected by the equal protection clause of the 14th amendment, were being violated.
The NAACP put Oliver Brown at the head of the roster as a legal strategy.
The Board of Education argued that segregation was already a way of life, and segregated schools simply got them ready for the segregation they would encounter as adults.
They also claimed that segregated schools were not harmful to black children.
The United States District Court for the District of Kansas heard the case, and ruled in favor of the Board of Education, using the ruling in Plessy v. Ferguson as their justification.
And yet, weirdly, the three-judge District Court panel argued that segregation hurt African American children.
Still, they insisted that whites-only and blacks-only schools in Topeka were of equal quality in terms of facilities, the qualifications of teachers, transportation, and what they were taught.
Brown and the rest of the parents appealed to the Supreme Court.
As it turns out, there were parents across the country fighting fiercely against school segregation in public schools as well.
In 1952, the Court considered five different cases that all dealt with the issue.
Ultimately, the Court just combined all five cases under the name of Brown v. Board of Education.
The NAACP had been involved in all five cases, and appointed Thurgood Marshall, a future Supreme Court justice, to argue the case for Brown.
The Court heard the case in spring of 1953, but remained divided on the issue
and they knew this was a big freaking deal, so they didn't want to rush it.
Chief Justice Fred Vinson was really worried about a close vote that would dramatically change the country, and he, in particular, wanted to postpone the decision.
He died in September, and President Dwight D. Eisenhower nominated Earl Warren, the former governor of California, as Vinson's replacement.
The Court reheard the case in December 1953, with Warren now leading.
For several months, the justices debated and discussed the case.
One justice who had thought about voting against Brown, Robert H. Jackson, suffered a mild heart attack during this time.
Warren went to visit him in the hospital, continuing to discuss the case during his recovery.
Ultimately, Jackson would change his mind.
Warren was able to do what Vinson was not- he brought all the Justices together for a unanimous decision.
That's right. On May 17th, 1954, the court voted 9-0 in support of Brown.
This overturn the now infamous Plessy v. Ferguson decision
saying that segregation of schools based on skin color went against the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment.
The court also argued that segregated schools made African American children feel inferior and damaged their development.
Warren gave the opinion of the Court, saying "We conclude that in the field of public education, the doctrine of 'separate but equal' has no place. Separate educational facilities are inherently unequal."
Reporters at the announcement of the decision were shocked that it was unanimous.
They expected a divided court.
They were also shocked to see Robert Jackson there.
Jackson had actually left the hospital to do so, and wanted to be there to show the Court was truly united behind the decision.
Now, the Court did not announce how their ruling was to be enforced.
Instead, it asked the attorney generals of all states enforcing segregation laws for their feedback.
The Court heard a bunch of more hearings over the next year, and on May 31, 1955, announced a plan for how to proceed with the desegregation of public schools.
They said it should occur with "all deliberate speed." Whatever that means.
That decision became known as Brown II. Sounds like a great movie sequel.
Anyway, of course many tried to ignore the ruling, and it would take several years before school systems fully desegregated. The South in particular resisted.
In probably the most famous case, 9 African American students attempted to go to the all-white Little Rock Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas.
The governor, Orval Faubus, had prevented them from going.
The Little Rock Nine, as they became known, were only allowed to attend after President Eisenhower stepped in and sent paratroopers to escort the students everyday for an entire year.
Other than Marbury v. Madison,
Brown v. Board of Education might just be the most important Supreme Court decision in American history.
It was consequential. All of sudden, all of American society and even culture changed.
It paved the way for integration and was a huge victory in the Civil Rights Movement.
It also proved as a model for using lawsuits to reform society.
I'll see you for the next Supreme Court case, jury!
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét