The Segregation of School in America

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The Segregation of School in America In history there are two major turning points in the fight for equal rights. The first was “Homer Plessey vs. The rail road company” of 1986. Homer Plessey was asked to sit in a black only carriage and refused; he was kicked off the train. He decided to take his case to the supreme court and they ruled in favour of segregation, saying “separate but equal”. Segregation had been occurring for many years already in the form of “The Jim Crow Laws” but now that it had been ruled legal it would happen much more openly. The next turning point in the fight against segregation happened in 1954. The case was “Brown vs. The Topeka Board Of Education”, the argument was about which school Linda brown should go to. Her father thought it was wrong that she should go to a school for black children that was further away from her home and less well looked after than nearby schools for white children. With the help of the NAACP he took his case to the Supreme Court and they ruled in his favour, overruling the 1896 case of “Plessey vs. The Rail Road Company”. Segregation was now officially illegal. This sparked up new opportunities for civil rights throughout the south. Black Americans throughout the U.S. now realised that something could really be done. Segregation in the U.S. wasn’t only targeted at black people, it was also aimed at Jews, Russians, Asians, Italians and all other races that weren’t White Anglo Saxon Protestants (WASP’s), but of all the races black people were classed as the worst. “Topeka vs. Brown” was the first victory for black civil rights campaigners. The problem that lied ahead of civil ... ... middle of paper ... ...Blacks was very hard to get due to very hard literacy test that only a handful of well educated men knew how to answer. All these factors helped against segregation thanks to the strong media coverage broadcasting worldwide. Politicians like George Wallace continued to back segregation in the hope to keep the votes of white people who also believed in segregation. The Topeka vs. Brown case was very important because it lead black Americans to believe that they had the power to desegregate America which lead to segregation ending in 1965. It ends the discrimination of anyone due to the colour of their skin in a public place. The President of the United States of America John F. Kennedy realised if the USA wanted to stay one of the world’s super powers then politicians would have to change their views on segregation.

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