Visit Your Local PBS Station PBS Home PBS Home Programs A-Z TV Schedules Watch Video Support PBS Shop PBS Search PBS
Freedom: A History of US.
HOME
Webisode Menu Tools & Activities For Teachers About the Series Search This Site
Webisode 13: Democracy and Struggles
Introduction Segment 1 Segment 2 Segment 3 Segment 4 Segment 5 Segment 6 Segment 7 Segment 8

See it Now - click the image and explore
Protesting Desegregation
Segment 8
Page 2

A year passes. It looks as if the court may be split. That would mean no decision in the case, and segregation could legally continue in America. Then President Eisenhower names a new chief justice of the Supreme Court. He is Earl Warren, the former governor of California. Warren is a mild-mannered man who is not expected to be a dynamic chief justice. But some who know him well realize that he has a gift for leadership. Finally, the waiting in the historic case is over. On May 17, 1954, Chief Justice Warren reads the court's decision in Brown v. Board of Education Check The Source - Brown v. Board of Education: Hear It Now - Chief Justice Warren "It is doubtful that any child may reasonably be expected to succeed in life if he is denied the opportunity of an education. Such an opportunity is a right which must be available to all on equal terms. Does segregation of children in public schools solely on the basis of race deprive children of the minority group of equal educational opportunities? We believe that it does. We conclude, unanimously, that the doctrine of 'separate but equal' has no place. Separate educational facilities are inherently unequal."

Did you notice the word "unanimously"? That's a very important word. The new chief justice has convinced the eight other justices that, because of the momentousness of this decision, they should all agree. Plessy v. Ferguson, a case about a railroad car, had made segregation a fact in almost all phases of daily life in the South. Brown v. Board of Education, a case about schoolchildren, will provide a way to end segregation—and not just in the classroom. On its editorial page, the New York Times celebrates the decision: "The highest court in the land, the guardian of our national conscience, has reaffirmed its faith and the underlying American faith in the equality of all men and all children before the law."

But the battle isn't over. Laws have to be enforced, and some people are determined not to enforce this one. Virginia's Prince Edward County closes all its public schools—for five years—rather than integrate them. White children are educated in "private" white academies, funded with public tax dollars. Black children are denied any schooling at all See It Now - Protesting Desegregation. Across the nation all-white suburbs begin to develop, where white children can be educated separately from blacks. In some places, when black children march into integrated schools, grownups insult them or throw rocks. Brown v. Board of Education may be a new birth of freedom, as the Washington Post calls it, but the baby is having a hard time feeling free.


Icon Key
See it Now Hear it Now Check the Source
Timeline
Glossary
Quiz
Image Browser
Additional Resources
Did You Know?
Thurgood Marshall and the other lawyers working on the Brown case practice their arguments on the students and faculty at Howard University in Washington D.C.


Did you know that Freedom is adapted from the award-winning Oxford University Press multi-volume book series, A History of US by Joy Hakim?



Previous
Email to a friend
Print this page