Brown V. Board Of Education Case Study

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Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka (1954) was first started after Linda Brown, a black pupil in Kansas, had been made to attend a distant segregated school rather than the closer white elementary school. Marshall argued that such segregation was unconstitutional because it denied Linda Brown the "equal protections of the laws" guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment. In an unanimous decision on May of 1954, the Supreme Court agreed, ending the "separate but equal" doctrine at last.

- The Battle for civil rights entered a new phase in North Carolina on February 1, 1960 when four black college students sat at a whites-only lunch counter at the local Woolworth's said the chain would "abide by local custom" which meant refusing to serve