School Segregation Now and Then

1031 Words3 Pages

“I have a dream!” Martin Luther King once said. He dreamed of a complete desegregated USA and the same chances for everybody where all men are created equal no matter of race or religious background (King). Schools were an immense issue in the 1960s, many black children did not finish high school to help their parents and those who did could often not afford to go to college. Compared to the white schools, the black schools had a massive lack of equipment and the teachers got paid a lot less. Even though many issues have changed since then, there is still segregation left in parts of the U.S., especially in schools.
While the first schools for African Americans were already established in the 1850s, it did not change for over a 100 years that the schools were separated. Many voices had to speak up, many court rulings had to be ruled and many protests had to be marched until it finally came to a change. “During the 19th century, nearly 100 court cases from 20 states and the District of Columbia challenged segregation or racial discrimination in schools” (Hendrie). One major court case was “Cumming v. Richmond County Board of Education […] marked the first time the U.S. Supreme Court had directly confronted the issue of racial discrimination in schools” (Hendrie). Just three years later in 1896 “Plessy v. Ferguson [was ruled], which upheld a Louisiana law requiring ‘separate but equal’ rail cars for blacks and whites” (Hendrie). The case raised questions why this ruling could not be applied for Schools. People who were hoping for equal chances for black children saw a chance in this court ruling. Plessy v. Fergusson is known as the most famous court case of the civil rights movement, but only three years after it was passed it was...

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... still there is a lot more to do! Once all visible boarders are removed, the people need to work on the boarders in their heads and get rid of all the folderol. It might take another few generations until this goal will be reached.

Works Cited
Bravin, Jess. SIRS. 16 March 2013. 10 May 2014.
Brown, Mitchell. LSU Libraries . n.d. 14 5 2014 .
Hendrie, Caroline. Lessons of A Century: The Struggles For Integration . 24 March 1999. 21 April 2014 .
King, Martin Luther. National Archieves. 28 August 1963. 10 5 2014 .

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