Argumentative Essay On Segregation

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When a person looks at the history of the United States, the era when segregation was an issue is not a topic an American would be proud to reflect on or converse about to another person. It was a time when the United States grew as a country but it took a lot of negatives to find any positives in the end of that time period. After the era was over and segregation did not exist to the same extent as it had in the past, Americans seemed to draw closer together and treat each other with a greater respect. It took an extended amount of time to get the United States of America to the point it is now; but looking back on the era and the events that took place, it turned out to be worth the time and struggles it had to overcome. Today, people do …show more content…

In the 1950’s it was a major issue with the school system. Black people were not allowed to attend the same school as white people and the school for blacks could have been as much as several miles out of town just so they would have to travel more and it would make them “work more” (“History of Segregation”). Some studies show that a majority of segregation in the school system was in the Western part of the United States. Many people believe though that the biggest issue with segregation as a whole was in the South (Orfield). “On October 29, 1969, the Supreme Court ruled that school districts must end segregation “now and hereafter”” (“End of Segregation in Public Schools”). This ruling and decision was known as Alexander v. Holmes County Board of Education (“End of Segregation in Public Schools”). There had been a decision made in 1955 that required all public schools to integrate “with all deliberate speed” (“End of Segregation in Public Schools”). The principals and directors of the schools took this statement as though they could begin the process of integrating the students at their convenience. When the 1969 decision was made, it stated that every school had to get rid of segregation right away. This initiated the process so that black and white children could begin attending the same schools at the same time (“End of Segregation in Public Schools”). In today’s society, Latinos …show more content…

He is a teacher, mentor, and also a coach for football, basketball and baseball. He began his career as a coach at two different high schools in North Carolina and Virginia. In 1969, in Williamston, North Carolina, Herman Boone was told that the town was not comfortable with having a black head coach for their local high school football team. With that being said, Herman then accepted an assistant coaching job at T.C. Williams High School in Alexandria, Virginia. “In 1971, the city of Alexandria decided to totally integrate its school system and appointed Herman as its first consolidated head football coach over a legendary white coach with several years seniority and a steadfast citywide following” (“71 Original Titans”). At the beginning of that season, Herman took the boys to a football camp in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania; and throughout the entire trip he forced the young men to do everything as one team. This meant that each room had whites and blacks together, they had to eat every meal together, and do drills and workouts together. Not only did this change the perspectives that the young men had of each other, it also brought them together to give them the potential for a successful season (“Spiritually & Practice”). That year Herman Boone was able to bring together a team of black and white athletes and form them into one team. He proved, not only to his team of young

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