In the 1950's, people was separated by the color of their skin. If you were African American you could not use the same bathroom, use the same water fountain, nor attend the same school as white people. Segregation caused alot of friction in the world, especially in the southern states. African Americans had enough of being treated differently just because their skin was not white. Blacks decided to stop being silence and put up a fight. They had many court cases due to segregation, but Brown V. Board of Education of Topeka was a major one that made an enormous impact in the black communities.The effects of Brown V. Board of Education of Topeka are schools are now open to all people despite their race, African Americans can get equal education opportunies, and civil rights movement. Initially, the effect of the Brown V. Board of Education of Topeka case is schools are open to all people despite the skin color of their skin. Brown V. Board of Education started because parents attempted to enroll their children in the closest school to their homes, but were denied because they were black . Due to Brown winning the case, children do not have to walk for five miles or wake up at …show more content…
Board of Education of Topeka case, it allowed African Americans to recieve equal eduacation rights. "The conventional story is that the principle announced in Brown, that "separate but equal" was inherently unequal, quickly spread from schools to all walks of life, leading Congress to act" (Gerald Rosenberg). Whites argued that the black schools were equal to the white schools, which was not true. The all white schools got brand new textbooks for each student, well as to the black schools only recieve a small amount of ragedy textbooks. When Brown won the case, it put "seperate but equal" to rest. Blacks could now learn at a higher level, receive professional teachers, and also have the same amount of protection as the whites students