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In the United States, segregation was abolished one place at a time. The Supreme Court case Brown v. Board of Education in 1954 was one major step, causing the process of integrating public schools to begin.

Segregation in the military was abolished in 1948 by President Truman.

The Civil Rights Act of 1964 was pressed forward and signed by President Johnson, and ended all state laws requiring public segregation.

The Montgomery Bus Boycott was in 1956 and resulted in a wave of protests against Jim Crow laws.

There is substantial de facto segregation today. This occurs because entire neighborhoods have become all black or all white. Cities not normally identified with racism like Milwaukee and Cleveland are heavily segregated by race.

Answer2:

Segregation has not ended. Legal Segregation has been reduced by the action of the people who particpated in the Civil Rights Movement, both Black and White and colors in -between. The American People decided that Legal Segregation was not the American Way. There are sections of America that still favors Segregation. Racism is alive in America and values of the Declaration of Independence, "We hold that all men are created equal.". is also alive in America.

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11y ago

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