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Brown V. Board Of Education Case Study

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IV. Little Rock desegregation Locals worked together to shut down the schools and avoid desegregation. The NAACP attempted to register black students into primarily white schools across the nation as they challenged the court ruling in the Brown v. Board of Education Case. They were against the approved petition. The NAACP placed nine African American students in the public school. These students became known as the little rock nine. They were bullied and target by other students, parents, and community locals. The Civil Rights Act of 1957 was passed. This law outlawed discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. V. Nonviolent Sit-ins The NAACP Youth Council protest many sit ins widespread through the southern states. …show more content…

Freedom Rides In December 1958, a Howard law student, Bruce Boynton, boarded a bus, in Richmond, Virginia and at a bus terminal break, he entered a “whites only” restaurant and was refused service, where he was then arrested for trespassing and found guilty for. Boynton was eventually released, but appealed his conviction and challenged “that it violated the Interstate Commerce Act and the Equal Protection, Due Process and Commerce Clauses of the Federal Constitution.” In the trial of Boynton v. Virginia, the decision was overturned. The court stated that Boynton “had a federal right to remain in the white portion of the restaurant’ as the Interstate Commerce Act “forbids any interstate common carrier by motor vehicle to subject any person to unjust discrimination.” The majority opinion of the Court, stated that “when a bus carrier has volunteered to make terminal and restaurant facilities… available to its interstate passengers…the terminal and restaurant must do this without discriminations. The case was ruled unconstitutional in having segregation on interstate travel. This was a start to desegregation in Interstate commerce. Boynton v. Virginia inspired the Freedom …show more content…

The president, Martin Luther King Jr. led the campaign. Their opposite target who was against their hopes was Eugene “Bull” Connor and those under his control. People were opposed to their advantage and prepared for arrest and violence as they preceded in the campaign. Many did face arrests, including Dr. King. While in jail king wrote the “Letter from Birmingham Jail, in mention to why and the actions he took as he only wanted one thing along with others in his

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