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it was Mr.Luther king Jr who helped Rosa Parks fight segregation.
Answer
Rosa Parks' case never reached the US Supreme Court because it got bogged down in the Alabama state court system. A different case addressing the Montgomery Bus Boycott, Browder v. Gayle,(1956), was reviewed by the US Supreme Court, but Dr. King didn't participate in oral arguments.
A lot of people have argued against segregation before the Court over the years because many different aspects of the issue have been challenged as unconstitutional, so there is no single answer to this question. The case most people are familiar with, however, is Brown v. Board of Education, (1954), when NAACP Chief Legal Counsel and future US Supreme Court justice Thurgood Marshall presented a compelling argument against allowing segregation in public schools.
NAACP Lead Counsel Thurgood Marshall argued against segregation before the US Supreme Court in the case Brown v. Board of Education, (1954).
Before the segregation cases, the Supreme Court was not on the side of de-segregation. The standing doctrine was the doctrine of separate but equal.
Before the segregation cases, the Supreme Court was not on the side of de-segregation. The standing doctrine was the doctrine of separate but equal.
One argument about segregation made by Thurgood Marshall before the Supreme Court was that African American students suffered damage from being treated differently.
One argument about segregation made by Thurgood Marshall before the Supreme Court was that African American students suffered damage from being treated differently.
Dred Scott
African American students suffered damage from being treated differently. APEX
This was the first time that the Supreme Court had declared an act of Congress unconstitutional.
Brown Vs. Board of Education
The first African American judge of the US Supreme Court. He is remembered especially for winning the 1954 case before the Supreme Court which ended segregation in public schools.
she argued for women's suffrage before the supreme court
Thurgood Marshall was the first African American Supreme Court Justice. Before that, he was instrumental in challenging segregation in the South. As a lawyer, he successfully argued against it in the seminal Brown v. Board of Education case.