The Brown v Board of Education in 1954 is one of the events that can spark a movement. In Topeka, Kansas Linda Brown and her sister had to walk through a dangerous railroad switch so they could get on there school bus to get to school. Since they have a closer school near them but, there for all white children so they both go to a school for African American children. The Brown family said that they think that segregated schools was against the Fourteenth Amendment. In the end they case made its way to Supreme Court, this is where the court decided that the state laws requires separate but equal schools violated the Fourteenth Amendment. …show more content…
On August 21, 1955 Emmett who is 14 years old, and cousin were going from Chicago to Mississippi. Emmett and his cousin had no knowledge of how African Americans were treated in the south. So when Emmett told a couple of kids that a white girl at his school his his girlfriend. He was told to talk to the white women cahier at the store around the corner. Since he talked to the white women her boyfriend and father went to his uncle's house and tokk Emmett. He had been missing for four day until his body was found beaten up in the Tallahatchie River. The boyfriend and the father of the white women went to court, and were found not guilty for killing Emmett Till. Months later they admitted to killing since the trail was acquitted they couldn't have a