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14 TH AMMENDMENT School Integration

School Integration. 14 th Amendment Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection Passed

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Page 1: School Integration. 14 th Amendment  Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection  Passed

14TH AMMENDMENT

School Integration

Page 2: School Integration. 14 th Amendment  Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection  Passed
Page 3: School Integration. 14 th Amendment  Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection  Passed

14th Amendment

Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection

Passed by the Congress on June 13, 1866 Ratified July 9, 1868 The 14th Amendment was ratified in 1868 to protect

the rights of native-born Black Americans, whose rights were being denied as recently-freed slaves

Granted citizenship to children of illegal alien mothers Prevent state governments from ever denying

citizenship to blacks born in the United States

Page 4: School Integration. 14 th Amendment  Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection  Passed

How it came into play Started has a enforcement measure of the 13th amendment After the 14th amendment passed on not having segregation and the

battle between Plessey vs. Ferguson was into our favor When Oliver L. Brown fought against the board of education stating

school segregation “violates the 14th amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which guarantees all citizens equal protection of the laws”

The supreme court favored in Brown, striking down the “separate but equal doctrines of Plessey vs. Ferguson and Brown vs. Board of education

Brown v. Board of Education was not the first challenge to school segregation

As early as 1849, African Americans filed suit against an educational system that mandated racial segregation, in the case of Roberts v. City of Boston.

Page 5: School Integration. 14 th Amendment  Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection  Passed

Continued…. Brown initiated educational and social reform throughout the United

States Some areas readily embraced integration after Brown Northern school districts had to resort to busing as a means to

achieving integration Integration of the public schools was an important step towards

equality among all the races. One of the most famous cases involved Little Rock's Central High

School, where Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus joined local whites in resisting integration by dispatching the Arkansas National Guard to block the nine black students from entering the school

Page 6: School Integration. 14 th Amendment  Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection  Passed

Proposal The definition of proposal is the act of

offering or suggesting something for acceptance, adoption, or performance.

The Congress proposed the Fourteenth Amendment.

The proposal took place on June 13, 1866.

Page 7: School Integration. 14 th Amendment  Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection  Passed

RATIFICATION

The definition of ratification is to confirm by expressing consent, approval, or formal sanction.

On July 9, 1868 3/4th of the states ratified the Amendment.

Many states rejected the Amendment, however in 2003, the Amendment had been ratified by every state in the Union.

Page 8: School Integration. 14 th Amendment  Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection  Passed

State Ratification Dates Connecticut (June 25, 1866) New Hampshire (July 6, 1866) Tennessee (July 19, 1866) New Jersey (September 11, 1866) Oregon (September 19, 1866) Vermont (October 30, 1866) Ohio (January 4, 1867)* New York (January 10, 1867) Kansas (January 11, 1867) Illinois (January 15, 1867) West Virginia (January 16, 1867) Michigan (January 16, 1867) Minnesota (January 16, 1867) Maine (January 19, 1867) Nevada (January 22, 1867) Indiana (January 23, 1867) Missouri (January 25, 1867) Rhode Island (February 7, 1867) Wisconsin (February 7, 1867) Pennsylvania (February 12, 1867) Massachusetts (March 20, 1867) Nebraska (June 15, 1867) Iowa (March 16, 1868) Arkansas (April 6, 1868) Florida (June 9, 1868) North Carolina (July 4, 1868, after having rejected it on

December 14, 1866)

Louisiana (July 9, 1868, after having rejected it on February 6, 1867)

South Carolina (July 9, 1868, after having rejected it on December 20, 1866)

Alabama (July 13, 1868, the date the ratification was "approved" by the governor)

Georgia (July 21, 1868, after having rejected it on November 9, 1866)

Oregon (withdrew October 15, 1868) Virginia (October 8, 1869, after having rejected it on

January 9, 1867) Mississippi (January 17, 1870) Texas (February 18, 1870, after having rejected it on

October 27, 1866) Delaware (February 12, 1901, after having rejected it on

February 7, 1867) Maryland (1959) California (1959) Oregon (1973) Kentucky (1976, after having rejected it on January 8,

1867) New Jersey (2003, after having rescinded on February

20, 1868) Ohio (2003, after having rescinded on January 15, 1868)

Page 9: School Integration. 14 th Amendment  Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection  Passed

PLESSEY VS. FERGUSONThe separate Car act Violation Cases

Between Homer Plessey and John Ferguson

Page 10: School Integration. 14 th Amendment  Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection  Passed

Plessey and the Violation

In 1890 Louisiana pass the Separate Cars Act

In 1892 Homer Plessey violated this act when he sat in the white first class coach

Homer Plessey was a man of 7/8 white blood and 1/8 African blood

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The Trial

The Supreme Court Strategy by (lawyer)Plessey was not under protection under the

14th amendment Plessey did violate the 13th amendment

Eight of the justices deigned that these amendments were relevant

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Their Majority Opinion

African’s were politically equal but not socially equal

Explains why they deigned the 13th and 14th amendments

13th amendment 14 amendment granted once enslaved

citizenship

Page 13: School Integration. 14 th Amendment  Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection  Passed

Brown Vs.

Board

of Education

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Fourteenth Amendment applies to Brown v. Board of Education

People were supposed to be treated equal regardless their race.

The case was brought up because African American students were not treated equal at schools.

Not treating African American students fair was against equal rights.

Page 15: School Integration. 14 th Amendment  Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection  Passed

Brown v. Board of EducationBeginning

Linda Brown a 3rd grade African American She went to an all black school in Topeka, Kansas The white school was closer to her school than the all

black school The all white was also better than the all black school

Better supplies and classes were not overcrowded

Page 16: School Integration. 14 th Amendment  Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection  Passed

Brown v. Board of Education

Lawsuit The lawsuit started in 1951 and ended in

1954 Oliver Brown started the lawsuit and later

added thirteen other parents The lawsuit started because the parent

were not allowed to enroll their children in a white school

Oliver first went to the NAACP to hire a lawyer

Page 17: School Integration. 14 th Amendment  Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection  Passed

Brown v. Board of Education

Court The case was lost at state Went to United States Supreme Court on

October 1, 1951 December 9, 1952 was the 1st day they

heard from the lawyers Supreme Court justices died

Started case back up and it was closed on May 17, 1954

Linda Brown and the others won

Page 18: School Integration. 14 th Amendment  Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection  Passed

Ruby Bridges

Born September 8, 1954

Walking out of William Frantz

Elementary School, Fall

1960

Page 19: School Integration. 14 th Amendment  Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection  Passed

The Problem We All Live With Spring 1960- Ruby Bridges

was one of several African-American kindergarteners in New Orleans to take a test to determine which children would be the first to attend integrated schools. Six students were chosen; only Bridges was assigned to William Frantz

November 14th,1960 – first day schools were integrated Only Barbara Henry,

from Boston, Massachusetts, was willing to teach Bridges, and for over a year Mrs. Henry taught her alone, "as if she were teaching a whole class." That first day, Bridges and her adult companions spent the entire day in the principal's office; the chaos of the school prevented their moving to the classroom until the second day

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"Driving up I could see the crowd, but living in New

Orleans, I actually thought it was Mardi Gras. There was a large crowd of people outside of the school. They were throwing things and shouting, and that sort of goes on in New Orleans at Mardi Gras.“

-Ruby Bridges

Page 21: School Integration. 14 th Amendment  Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection  Passed

Fourteenth Amendment Section. 1. All persons born or naturalized in the

United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws

http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/data/constitution/amendment14/

Page 22: School Integration. 14 th Amendment  Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection  Passed

Affirmative Action

an active effort to improve the employment or educational opportunities of members of minority groups and women

Page 23: School Integration. 14 th Amendment  Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection  Passed

Fourteenth Amendment applies to Affirmative Action

The fourteenth amendment guarantees equal protection under the law and affirmative action ensures that those who were discriminated against in the past are now receiving equal opportunity (the minorities ).

• Critics feel that affirmative action

violates violate the principle that all

individuals are equal under the law.

Page 24: School Integration. 14 th Amendment  Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection  Passed

School integration Incorporates Affirmative action

Page 25: School Integration. 14 th Amendment  Rights were guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due to the process and equal protection  Passed

The EndHope you enjoyed the

presentation!