The Plessy V. Ferguson Trial

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Civil Rights are rights of any individual to receive equal treatment. According to Merriam - Webster, “Discrimination is the act of being prejudiced or having a prejudicial outlook, action, or treatment against any other race” was very common in the United States during 1890’s. In the 1890’s, the United States was approaching its lowest point of race relations between whites and blacks. The number of lynchings increased to 230 murders in 1892 and continued to increase year after year. On June 7th, 1892, an unassuming, well dressed shoemaker from New Orleans named Homer Plessy bought a first class ticket from the East Louisiana Railroad and boarded a passenger car designated for whites only. When the ride came to an end, Plessy had been arrested …show more content…

The Supreme Court’s ruling of “separate but equal” facilities for blacks and whites in the Plessy v. Ferguson trial was an appalling decision because it legitimized unjust treatment of blacks which was unethical and unconstitutional, and its negative effects remain present in society today (Meta Page Title). During the 1870’s, a law was enacted called The Jim Crow Laws which legalized segregation between African Americans and whites. This law restricted African Americans from their rights on the use of public transportation, public bathrooms, to vote, and to go to schools. It was much harder for African Americans to get jobs at this time. Many were desperate for money and needed a place to stay or even a home. So therefore, many African Americans got jobs as a slave and moved to the south. This was a huge problem for many people and it felt for them as if there needed to be a change. So came along Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr. They were the reason Civil Rights were enacted and thus came rights for African Americans (Jim Crow Laws). Civil Rights was and is a huge part of American history. “The Civil Rights Law, a Johnson legacy, …show more content…

Questions were once spewed asking why, how, and is this the right call? In an article, it has been said that Plessy has lost the votes from 7-1. “Writing for the majority, Associate Justice Henry Billings Brown rejected Plessy’s arguments that the act violated the Thirteenth Amendment (1865) to the U.S. Constitution, which prohibited slavery, and the Fourteenth Amendment, which granted full and equal rights of citizenship to African Americans (Wormser). The Separate Car Act did not conflict with the Thirteenth Amendment, according to Brown, because it did not reestablish slavery or constitute a “badge” of slavery or servitude. In reaching this conclusion he relied on the Supreme Court’s ruling in the Civil Rights Cases (1883), which found that racial discrimination against African Americans in inns, public conveyances, and places of public amusement “imposes no badge of slavery or involuntary servitude…but at most, infringes rights which are protected from State aggression by the XIVth Amendment.” (Britannica). Plessy was then arrested and jailed from 1896 and so forth. This case, although made a bad reputation on the Supreme Court, made America change. Later on, people started to say something. They started to make a change, difference in this country and because of that, we are who we are

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