How Did Brown V Board Of Education Affect The Civil Rights Movement

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Long after the passing of the emancipation proclamation clause, African Americans still lived in a time where the battle for equality was in high demand. With the Jim Crow law being deeply rooted in the southern states, this prohibited all African Americans from their citizens’ rights. They lived in a world where it exhibited disenfranchisement, segregation, racial violence, the dominance of white power, and all from local to state levels the prevention from entering any social locations. African Americans new that they could not live like this anymore. So, African Americans had a plan and it was to seek revolution: The Civil Rights Movement. The Civil Rights Movement was the era where all African Americans united to fight for their freedom. …show more content…

Through the many years of combatting with the brutality of white power and laws, the awaited struggle of the civil rights movement made African Americans realized their American dream. One of the first major battles that the civil rights movement accomplished was the desegregation of public schools in 1954 by the supreme court ruling of Brown v Board of Education of Topeka. Brown v Board of Education was a suit filed on the behalf of an African student, Linda Brown, who was forced to attend a distant segregated school due to the elementary school near her house was an all-white school. Lawyer Thurgood Marshall, a National Association for the Advancement of Colored People member, took charge of this case and argued that such segregation cannot be because it was unconstitutional and it violated what the fourteenth amendment assured under the “equal protection” clause. Chief Justice, Earl Warren, spoke for the supreme court and announced that the Plessy v Ferguson, …show more content…

Surely at the time of the Civil Rights Movement there were plenty of advocators that influence some changes for the lives of Africans. However, little to unseen change was not enough for the battle of equality. African Americans needed leaders who were willing to do whatever it took so that equality, freedom, and justice can be seen from miles away. Fortunately, the African Americans were in luck because of two main activists, who were tired of seeing no progression, did what no one else attempted to do: fight for what they believe in. The first activist who left her mark implanted in a public bus was, Rosa Parks. Rosa Parks was given the name “mother of the civil rights movement” because of the actions that she did against segregated laws. Parks, in the most segregated city in the United States, Montgomery, Alabama, refused to give her seat to a white person in a public bus. Parks refused to give her seat up because she stated that she was tired of seen all Africans giving in to the orders of whites. She was tired of whites always winning and blacks having no voice. In the website of black history under the article Rosa Parks, Parks explains, “People always say that I didn’t give up my seat because I was tired, . . . but that isn’t true. I was not tired physically… No, the only