Separate but equal

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    Topeka, Kansas After many years under the “separate but equal” doctrine of the Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), African Americans finally gained their first step to actual equality, specifically in school. The “separate but equal” doctrine established separate facilities, including separate schools, for blacks and whites that were said to be equal, but were not. In fact, whites only schools provided much better education than blacks only schools. The separate school systems were inherently unequal and…

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    The idea of racism is a weird thing. Its an idea of hatred, of showing that because someone is a different color, they are somehow superior or inferior. Since the 1600s when African Americans came to America they are have been treated differently, and up until the 1900s, they were still treated as inferior. Now it is 2016, and segregation is illegal, slavery is illegal, and black people share all the rights of a white person. But just because it is illegal to enslave another human does not mean…

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    Brown V Board Essay

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    giving them equal protection from the law. (White, 2014) The fourteenth amendment written by our founding fathers was used as a way to address equality of all United States citizens regardless of race and to provide legal protection of individuals from being excluded from rights without proper legal…

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    Plessy V. Ferguson “The law is not an end in and of itself, nor does it provide ends. It is preeminently a means to serve what we think is right” (Aaseng, 8). After the Civil War, in 1865, the US continued to remain a union divided. Although slavery was abolished, African Americans did not have the same rights as Whites. The new laws that were continuing to be passed limited the so called “freedom” that African Americans had. These laws didn’t allow Black’s do use the same facilities, vote,…

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    The Jim Crow Laws

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    the Constitutional protections of blacks with the infamous Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) case, which legitimized Jim Crow laws and the Jim Crow way of life.” Even though these laws were clearly in breach of the 14th amendment, Congress passed the “Separate but Equal” doctrine, allowing states to divide public facilities and to make sure whites were not “contaminated” by blacks. Separating the two races made it so each black felt as though they were inferior. Which at that point in time, they were so…

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    Kansas was a landmark case of the United States’ Supreme Court. It was the combination of five “…cases from four states and the District of Columbia…that reached the Supreme Court in 1952” (Give Me Liberty! 953) that challenged the controversial “separate but equal” policy regarding segregated facilities that resulted from the Plessy v. Ferguson case in 1896. In this case, the plaintiffs targeted the outstanding differences between schools for white children and those for black, who often…

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    Plessy Vs Ferguson

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    The United States Supreme Court decision upholding the constitutionality of state laws requiring racial segregation in public facilities under the doctrine of "separate but equal" took place in 1896 known as the Plessy vs Ferguson act. The Plessy V. Ferguson did not make it to where blacks and whites had all the same rights, but at the time, they thought that it was a good decision. Little did they know, less than a hundred years later would we be trying to integrate white and black schools. It…

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    holding for this was that separate schools for blacks and whites were not equal. In the 1950’s, there was a lot of segregation between whites and blacks, so much that there were separate schools for each race. The father of Linda Brown, an African-American, filed against the Kansas Board of Education claiming they were violating the fourteenth amendment. In the end, the Supreme Court unanimously decided that segregation was not constitutional and that “separate was not equal.” I personally do…

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    Plaintiffs conclude that segregation was unconstitutional under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Brown case served as a spark for the civil rights movement, inspiring education reform everywhere, and changing the legal means of challenging segregation in all areas of society. In all except for one case, a three judge federal district court cited Plessy vs. Ferguson in denying relief under the “separate but equal” doctrine. Plaintiffs concluded that in an appeal to the…

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    In the mid 1800’s segregation played a big role in society. All public areas such as restrooms restaurants and schools were separate but not equal like the law said it should be. Even the railways were segregated, there were different railway cars for blacks and whites. The only exception was that nurses working on children of the opposite color were allowed to sit in the different compartments. A penalty of twenty-five dollars or up to twenty days in jail was the consequence for sitting in the…

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