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Essay On Thurgood Marshall

428 Words2 Pages

Thurgood Marshall, the first ever African American supreme court justice, who make an extreme impact in the United State then to now. Marshall was born in Baltimore, Maryland on July 2, 1908. He was rejected from University of Maryland Law School just because he was an African American. He wanted to make a change on this. How he changed America was by fighting in the Brown v. Board case, Jim Crow laws and women rights. Thurgood Marshalls most notible case was the Brown v Board case. This case lasted almost two years from 1952-1954. It was to fight the “seprate but equal” movement, in which, the school were separate but not equal. Examples are the education, quality of school, transportation and overcrowding. How Marshall helped in this case was by personally argueing it before the court to help turn heads on the case. This was successful by its unanimous ruling of stating being unconstitutional. …show more content…

Since he experienced segregation he didn’t want other to suffer the way he had. By participating in cases such as, Murray v. Maryland (1936), McLaurin v. Oklahoma Board of Regents of Higher Education (1950) and many more. Marshall was chipping at the Jim Crow Laws. He was slowly helping African Americans case by case in giving them what they needed. After many more cases after he got the attention of many citizens and soon caught the attention of Kennedy who appointed him into U.S Court of Appeals. Thurgood along with being consistant on fighting for African American rights, faught for womens rights too. Such as the Reed v. Reed case, in which administrators cannot discriminate or prefer on the sex of a person over the other. This was a major turning point for women equality rights. It gave women the opportunity to get jobs men would normal only get. Thurgood brought his opinions to the court about Reed v. Reed to influence the winning

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