Supreme Court Cases: Brown V. Board Of Education

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On May 17, 1954, Americans knew one of The most important judicial decisions issued by the Supreme Court of the country. In the Brown case against the School Board, the judges of the high court issued a unanimous vote (9-0) on the school segregation between blacks and whites, declaring it unconstitutional.
With this historic verdict began a period of profound social transformation that would eventually lead to the Civil Rights Movement and amendments against racial discrimination. The Supreme Court put an end to decades of covert racism in the fallacy of "separate but equal" which was curiously adopted by the same magistracy in the case Plessy v. Ferguson, 1896.
An African American man named Homer Plessy refused to give up his seat to a white man on a train in New Orleans, violating the laws established by the state of Louisiana. Therefore he was
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By the year 1896, his case had reached the Supreme Court of the United States. But failed when the court ruled against Plessy with a vote of 8-1.
The outcome of the case, sadly continued the legality of Jim Crow laws and other norms of racial discrimination.
For a long time, many people continuously fought for abolition of Jim Crow laws, Until the case of Brown v. Board of Education name given by the supreme court to attach five cases previously analyzed regarding segregation in public schools. In the case of Brown v. Board of Education were, Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Briggs v. Elliot, Davis v. Board of Education of Prince Edward County (Va.), Boiling v. Sharpe, and Gebhart v. Ethel. All of these sponsored by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) cases
In 1951, a collective action was sued against the Board of Education of the City of Topeka, Kansas, in the District Court of the United States for the District of Kansas. The plaintiffs were thirteen Topeka parents on behalf of their twenty