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- | ====== Plessy v. Ferguson: The Ultimate Guide to " | + | |
- | **LEGAL DISCLAIMER: | + | |
- | ===== What is Plessy v. Ferguson? A 30-Second Summary ===== | + | |
- | Imagine a town council passes a law: blue-eyed children and brown-eyed children must attend different schools. The council claims both schools are " | + | |
- | * **Key Takeaways At-a-Glance: | + | |
- | * **The Core Ruling:** **Plessy v. Ferguson** was a landmark `[[supreme_court]]` decision that upheld the constitutionality of racial segregation by establishing the " | + | |
- | * **The Human Impact:** This ruling gave legal justification for `[[jim_crow_laws]]` across the American South, systematically denying African Americans equal access to education, transportation, | + | |
- | * **Its Overturning: | + | |
- | ===== Part 1: The Historical Stage for a Landmark Decision ===== | + | |
- | ==== A Nation Divided: The Post-Reconstruction South ==== | + | |
- | To understand **Plessy v. Ferguson**, we must first look at the turbulent era that gave birth to it. The period after the `[[civil_war]]` known as `[[reconstruction]]` (1865-1877) was a time of fragile hope for African Americans. The passage of the `[[thirteenth_amendment]]` (abolishing slavery), `[[fourteenth_amendment]]` (granting citizenship and equal protection), | + | |
- | This progress, however, was met with fierce and violent resistance. When federal troops withdrew from the South in 1877, `[[reconstruction]]` effectively ended. Southern states, now back in the hands of white supremacist governments, | + | |
- | ==== The Law on the Books: The Louisiana Separate Car Act of 1890 ==== | + | |
- | In 1890, the Louisiana General Assembly passed the **Separate Car Act**. This law mandated "equal but separate accommodations for the white, and colored races" on all passenger railways within the state. Railroad companies were required to provide separate cars or partitioned sections for Black and white passengers. Any passenger insisting on sitting in the wrong section could be fined $25 or jailed for 20 days. | + | |
- | This law was a direct challenge to the spirit, if not the letter, of the `[[fourteenth_amendment]]`. The amendment’s `[[equal_protection_clause]]` explicitly states that no state shall "deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." The question was, did providing " | + | |
- | ==== A Deliberate Test: The Comité des Citoyens ==== | + | |
- | The case of **Plessy v. Ferguson** was not a random accident. It was a carefully orchestrated act of civil disobedience designed to challenge the Separate Car Act in court. A group of prominent Creole and African American citizens in New Orleans formed the **Comité des Citoyens** (Committee of Citizens) to lead this fight. | + | |
- | They needed a plaintiff who could test the law's absurdity. They chose **Homer Plessy**. Plessy was a man of mixed racial heritage—seven-eighths white and one-eighth | + |