Greatest Impact on the Legal System October 1952nd, the Supreme Court stated that it would hear five school segregation cases collectively, one of which being Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka (Kansas) (Delinder, 2004). The cases all documented inadequate an unfair funding for the segregated schools. Black children lacked playgrounds, ball fields, libraries, cafeterias and many other amenities as services that were provided for white children in the new schools. In several cities school buses were only provided for whites, and in some cases, there was no senior high school for black students (Delinder, 2004) The Brown case of Topeka included twelve other plaintiffs besides Oliver Brown, whose daughter was not allowed to attend the nearest school in her neighborhood, and was instead being bussed twenty-one blocks to a segregated school (White, 2002). “On May 17, 1954, the Court declared that racial segregation in public schools violated the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, effectively overturning the 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson decision mandating “separate but equal” …show more content…
The term “separate but equal” was deemed unacceptable in the courts and that segregation is a denial of equal protection of the laws defined in the 14th amendment (Wolff, 2016). This court case is one of the most well-known cases, and was a very big accomplishment for America. This case allowed Congress to review the things that they had been doing wrong, and realize that blacks are no different than whites and should not be segregated under any circumstance. This case has affected how laws are created when it comes to education, and has allowed for children of race to earn the same level of education as a white child under the protection of the 14th amendment that the courts now recognize