Little Rock Nine Segregation

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“Segregation: The separation of humans into ethnic or racial groups in daily life.” Throughout history, black people were racially segregated and looked down upon as inferior. They were wrenched from their native country, transported by the hundreds on small ships, then made slaves to an often very cruel master. Ever since the civil war, when black people were given their freedom, white people who did not want them to be equal tried their best to pass laws that would limit that freedom as much as possible. Black people were harshly segregated and treated immorally due to people's belief that the color of someone's skin matters more than allowing them to have the same freedom as everyone else. In response to this, a black organization was made …show more content…
This was important not only to satisfy the demands of the Little Rock School Board (On May 22, 1954, the Little Rock School Board issued "a statement saying that it would comply with the court's decision, once the court outlined the method and time frame for implementation"(“Little Rock Nine” 2)), but to make the integration as smooth and organized as possible. This later led to the Little Rock Nine, a group of nine black children who were chosen to start the integration process in Central High School. However, this also sparked severe opposition from many whites, including Governor Faubus of the state of …show more content…
Their entrance into the school in 1957 sparked a nationwide crisis when Arkansas governor Orval Faubus, in defiance of a federal court order, called out the Arkansas National Guard to prevent the Nine from entering (“Little Rock Nine” 4). On that day, and many days after, the white mob outside the school chanted “2, 4, 6, 8, We ain’t gonna integrate!”, and there even was a day when the police were not confident enough in holding back the mob and requested the Little Rock Nine to leave the school for their own safety. After the Court’s decision and the making of the Blossom Plan, nineteen U.S. senators and eighty-one congressmen signed something called the “Southern Manifesto” which denounced/rejected the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision and pleaded for all Southern States to resist it (“The Lost Year” 3). Eventually, desegregation was completely accomplished, but it clearly did not happen with complete obedience in the matter. It has taken several decades since the U.S Supreme Court’s decision for integration to be