Racial Segregation In Clarendon County

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The struggle for impartial, unbiased conditions for African Americans by African Americans during the decades following after the ratifying of Thirteenth Amendment, led to a constant strife between the Black and White race. Where the latter genuinely believed that because Blacks are inferior to their “dominant” race, that it is morally acceptable to keep the two races separated, if both have the “same” or “equal” facilities. However, what the government and the White race thought was “equal” was far from it. Although all resources and buildings for Blacks were prominently substandard when compared to the “White Only” facilities, improved schools were an extremely fought for privilege that African Americans were passionate for, especially for …show more content…

In this time, “five cases that challenged racial segregation in public schools moved through the courts in four states and the District of Columbia” (Irons 383). Thurgood Marshall, a lawyer involved in the Brown v Board case, first investigated and utilized evidence from schools in Clarendon County because there was several prominent testimonies that could be pulled from it. Like the segregation that was “deeply rooted in the region’s laws and customs,” “the enormous disparities between Clarendon County’s black and white schools to point up the utter hypocrisy of ‘separate but equal.’” and Marshall “wanted to acknowledge the courage of black parents who stood up for their children in a citadel of segregation like South Carolina” (Irons 383-384). Although Blacks and Whites seemed to get along well, African Americans were obligated to tip their hats to whites and call them “sir,” which only enforced the inequality between the two, when Whites would not repeat the action back. One African American Pastor and teacher, Reverend J. A. DeLaine, refused to act towards Whites like this, just because of their skin color. He also witnessed daily how his students would walk to school and get splashed with a either dust or mud by school buses that exclusively transported Whites. He decided to take action and he wrote up a petition with the only state’s black lawyer, Harold Boulware, and brought it back for Levi Pearson, a black farmer and father of three, to sign it. When DeLaine delivered the petition to a white superintendent, he was told that the “county had no money for buses for black children” (Irons 385). After this he wrote the school board, and requested a hearing; however, he never got an answer, so he filed a suit in federal court. His court case was eventually dismissed because his land was split in between

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