BROWN VS. BOARD OF EDUCATIONContributions to the Civil Rights movement in the United States
Goals/Objectives:5th grade Social Studies
Era 9 – Postwar United States (1945-1970’s)5.5.12d – Explain Brown vs. Board of Education and its importance to the Civil Rights movement5.5.spi8 Recognize examples of how the United States confronted Civil Rights issues.
What do you know about Civil Rights?1. What does the 13th amendment to the
Constitution of the United States say?2. What year was the 13th amendment passed?3. What does the 14th amendment to the
Constitution of the United States say?4. What year was it passed?5. What does Plessy vs. Ferguson have to do with
schools?
The Civil Rights Movement prior to 1954• 13th Amendment (1865) outlawed slavery• 14th Amendment (1868) actually gave rights to “all
persons born or naturalized in the United States.”• After the 14th Amendment –racism was legalized• 1896 – Plessy vs. Ferguson: Separate but equal is okay• Public buildings, restrooms, public transportation,
schools, etc. were segregated.
What does segregated mean anyway?
Segregation:The separation or isolation from others or a main body group.
Racial segregation:The separation of humans in to racial groups
Seeking Change in the Courts• 1909: NAACP is formed• A young black lawyer named Thurgood
Marshall is General Counsel for the NAACP
• 1930’s: Marshall and the NAACP begin to challenge the “separate but equal” doctrine
• First cases were colleges at the graduate level
• 1938 – Missouri ex rel. Gaines v. Canada, Registrar of the University of Missouri
• 1950 – Sweatt v. Painter• The goal was to integrate all of American
societyWhat does integration mean?
Integration:The process of “desegregation” or not excluding some from the main group. Integration also involves making equal opportunity for all, regardless of race.
Desegregation is primarily a legal term, used in courts and court cases.
Integration primarily refers to what happens in society or communities.
Brown vs. Board of Education• Black 3rd grader named Linda Brown of Topeka, KS• Had to walk 1 mile and through a railroad switchyard to
get to her black elementary school• White school was only 7 blocks from her house• NAACP requested an injunction to forbid the segregation
and allow Linda to attend the white school• Topeka court ruled that “segregation in schools prepared
black students for the segregation that exists in our society”
• Thurgood Marshall appealed to the Supreme Court• After 2 days of legal arguments, Chief Justice Earl
Warren delivers the verdict• Brown vs. Board of Education overturned Plessy vs.
Ferguson • Made segregation illegal
http://www.history.com/videos/maya-angelou-brown-vs-board-of-education#maya-angelou-brown-vs-board-of-education
Famed author and poet Maya Angelou on Brown vs. Board of Education
So what?• Brown vs. Board of Education was one catalyst of
the Civil Rights movement• In the years following the 1954 case black people
began to assert their rights to live integrated into society:
• Woolworth’s lunch counter sit ins• Southern Christian Leadership Conference and Dr.
Martin Luther King • Rosa Parks and Montgomery Bus boycotts• The Little Rock Nine• Locally, The Clinton 12• It was a scary time and many were arrested, hurt,
and killed• Black people stood up for the rights afforded them
as citizens of the United States• “We hold these truths to be self evident, that ALL
men are created equal, endowed by their Creator certain inalienable rights and among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” (Declaration of Independence)
Things to think about…• What is segregation?• What is integration?• What did Plessy vs. Ferguson make legal?• What year did Brown vs. Board of Education
happen?• What did Brown vs. Board of Education do to
American schools?• What part did Brown vs. Board of Education play in
the Civil Rights Movement?
Goals/Objectives:5th grade Social Studies
Era 9 – Postwar United States (1945-1970’s)5.5.12d – Explain Brown vs. Board of Education and its importance to the Civil Rights movement5.5.spi8 Recognize examples of how the United States confronted Civil Rights issues.