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THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT
14

The Segregation System Plessy vs. Ferguson—established “separate but equal accommodations for the white and colored races”

Dec 29, 2015

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Mitchell Bryan
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Page 1: The Segregation System  Plessy vs. Ferguson—established “separate but equal accommodations for the white and colored races”

THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT

Page 2: The Segregation System  Plessy vs. Ferguson—established “separate but equal accommodations for the white and colored races”

The Segregation System

Plessy vs. Ferguson—established “separate but equal accommodations for the white and colored races”

Page 3: The Segregation System  Plessy vs. Ferguson—established “separate but equal accommodations for the white and colored races”

Does this look equal?

School for white children in 1930. School for black children in 1930.

Both schools are located in Halifax County, VA.

Page 4: The Segregation System  Plessy vs. Ferguson—established “separate but equal accommodations for the white and colored races”

US School Segregation in 1952

Segregation required

Segregation permitted

No specific legislation, or local option

Segregation prohibited

Page 5: The Segregation System  Plessy vs. Ferguson—established “separate but equal accommodations for the white and colored races”

What led to the Civil Rights Movement? WWII

Shortage of white male laborer opened up new jobs for Latinos, women and blacks.

Nearly 1 million served in the armed forces.

During the war, organizations campaigned for voting rights and challenged Jim Crow laws.

Page 6: The Segregation System  Plessy vs. Ferguson—established “separate but equal accommodations for the white and colored races”

NAACP leads the fight Charles Hamilton

Houston (1934-38)Argued the inequality

of the schools. At that time, the

nation spent 10x more $ on a white child than a black child.

Page 7: The Segregation System  Plessy vs. Ferguson—established “separate but equal accommodations for the white and colored races”

Challenging segregation in court

NAACP placed law students under Marshall in 1938.

Won 29/32 cases for the next 23 years.

Page 8: The Segregation System  Plessy vs. Ferguson—established “separate but equal accommodations for the white and colored races”

Milestone court cases Morgan v. Virginia

Illegal to have segregation on interstate buses.

Sweatt v PainterState law schools

must admit black applicants

Page 9: The Segregation System  Plessy vs. Ferguson—established “separate but equal accommodations for the white and colored races”

Brown v Board of Education May 17, 1945

Linda Brown’s father sued for his daughter to attend the white elementary school 4 blocks from his house rather than the black one 21 blocks away.

AND THE VERDICT IS….Segregation in

schooling is over!

Page 10: The Segregation System  Plessy vs. Ferguson—established “separate but equal accommodations for the white and colored races”

Reaction to School Desegregation 1955—500 schools

had desegregated Brown II—forced

desegregation of schools with all speed

Page 11: The Segregation System  Plessy vs. Ferguson—established “separate but equal accommodations for the white and colored races”

Crisis in Little Rock Gov. Orval Faubus

publicly showed support for segregation in Sept. 1957.He ordered the

National Guard to turn away the “Little Rock Nine” from the high school.

Page 13: The Segregation System  Plessy vs. Ferguson—established “separate but equal accommodations for the white and colored races”

Eisenhower Acts Ordered 1,000

paratroopers into Little Rock to protect the 9 students.

Faubus eventually shuts down the Central Rock High School.