Plessy v. Ferguson was the first case to justify segregation using the ‘separate but equal’ doctrine. The Supreme Court’s stand on the Brown v the Board of Education case has been appreciated with much significance. To some people it was a sign of the beginning of the civil rights in the 1950s and the 1960s while to others it was an indication of the crumbling of segregation. The Brown decision is a landmark in history as it overturned the legal policies that had been established by the Plessy v. Ferguson decisions that made practices of separate but equal legal. For a long time, civil rights movements in the first fifty years of the 290th century were concurrent with the policy, separate but equal, in efforts to get a grip …show more content…
According toAfrican Americans, the 14th amendment was adopted in order to eradicate inequality between races. This posed as a common argument against originals that often delivers patently unjust results. This was likely the case in the Plessy v. Fergusson in which the defendants argued that racial segregation was constitutional. This was likely since separation was highly tolerated and even endorsed by numerous citizens who voted for the fourteenth amendment. However, African Americans claimed that segregation had psychological effects on polls of their race and was a disadvantage to the education system as a while. Nonetheless, the defense purported that segregation was not unconstitutional in any way and there was nothing in the constitution outlawing it. They claimed that it was a matter that should be handled by the states and states should decide on the matter. Nevertheless, the court sided with the plaintiffs ruling that segregation violated the 14th amendment, which guaranteed that ‘states could not deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the law’. In the case’s commentary, chief Justice Earl Warren said that” In the arena of public education, the doctrine of ‘separate but equal’ is not applicable.” He also added saying,” separate educational facilities are inherently