Brown V. Board

Today we had a group hold a mock trial fighting the case of Brown V. Board of Education of Topeka. This trial occurred in Kansas during the year of 1954. One side fought the segregation of the schools, while the other group fought to end segregation in schools. The students used different ways to fight their point whether it was through religion, ethics, or morals. 


This case started in 1951, when a school in Topeka Kansas, refused to let African American Oliver Brown into the academic building. She was then forced to take a bus to a school much further away, to a segregated school district for Black children only. The Brown family and 12 others were in the same situation. They decided to create a class action lawsuit in the U.S. federal court versus the Topeka Board of education. The court decided that the segregation of the children was unconstitutional and the segregation in the school district would stop. This overruled another popular case Plessy V. Fergusson, which called for separate but equal segregation. Where Plessy V. Fergusson stated that Black and Whites should be separate, Brown V. Board came to the conclusion that they should be put together. 


All in all, Brown V. Board was a milestone court case that affected the nation for many years to come. Without this court ruling, segregation could have still occurred in the present day. At the end of the day, we are all equal. 

A Brown v. Board of Education 60th Anniversary Reading List | Colorlines https://www.history.com/topics/black-history/brown-v-board-of-education-of-topeka

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