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The U.S. Supreme Court ordered schools to gradually racially integrate.
The Brown vs Board of Education was a decision about school. The courts declared government could not provide "equal but separate" educations. Schools had to desegregate.
Plessy v. Ferguson (1896),
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Delaware, Maryland, Missouri - apex
Delaware, Maryland, Missouri - apex
The name of the high school that was one of the first to integrate following the Brown v Board of Education case is Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas.
The decision was made to integrate the school so that children of all races could receive an equal education.
Brown v. Board of Education, 347 US 483 (1954)The Supreme Court declared racial segregation in public schools unconstitutional, which was intended to bar school districts from maintaining separate schools for African-American and white children. The actual order to integrate wasn't released until the decision in Brown v. Board of Education II, (1955).The Supreme Court also addressed segregation in public schools in a number of later cases, as districts attempted to evade integration through restructuring their districts, issuing private school vouchers, and using other methods that the US Supreme Court had to prohibit explicitly.
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The U.S. Supreme Court ordered schools to gradually racially integrate.
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The judge who heard the case.
Brown v. Board of Education was originally filed against the Board of Education of Topeka (Kansas) in US District for the District of Kansas in 1951. By the time the case was argued before the Supreme Court it had been consolidated with school districts or named administrators in Virginia, South Carolina and Delaware. The Court also heard a companion case, Bolling v. Sharpe, filed against the District of Columbia (federal territory).Brown was a class action suit, meaning the decision applied not only to the named respondents (like defendants), but to all other public school districts in the United States.Case Citation:Brown v. Board of Education, 347 US 483 (1954)
segregation
Following the Brown v. Board of Education case, schools had to allow black and white pupils to have an education together. They could no longer be separated into different schools. Black and white children had to be given the same, equal opportunities.