During the 1940s and 1950s,
NAACP lawyer Thurgood Marshall directed a carefully constructed legal campaign
against Southern segregation laws. These laws separated blacks and whites in
such areas of public life as schools, restaurants, drinking fountains, bus
stations, and public transportation. The NAACP focused on segregation in
education, and won a number of court victories, culminating in the Supreme
Court's ruling in 1954 in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka. This
ruling declared that separate facilities were inherently unequal and therefore
unconstitutional, thus reversing the 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson ruling.
However, President Dwight
D. Eisenhower did not support a strong federal role in enforcing desegregation,
an attitude that encouraged Southern resistance. State troopers were used in
Texas to prevent integration; people who supported integration risked losing
their jobs; and segregationists set off bombs in Tennessee and Alabama. In a
'Southern Manifesto,' 101 congressmen vowed to resist integration.
Meanwhile, after three
years of negotiation, the black community and the school board in Little Rock,
Arkansas, devised a plan to enroll nine black students at Central High School.
When the plan was implemented in the fall of 1957, Governor Orval Faubus used
the National Guard to block the black students from entering the school. The
public outcry forced Eisenhower to act. He put the National Guard under federal
direction and sent federal troops to enforce the Brown decision and protect the
students from white mobs. Nevertheless, the following year, Faubus closed all
of Little Rock's high schools rather than integrate them. Ten years after the Brown
decision, less than two percent of Southern black children attended
integrated schools.
Whites in many areas of
the South organized private white schools rather than accept integration. In
1959 officials in Prince Edward County, Virginia, moved white students and
state education funds to hastily organized white private schools. For four
years, until privately funded black schools could be organized, black students
in the county had no schools. Finally in 1963 the county complied with court
rulings and reopened the public schools. During the early 1960s, it was
necessary to maintain federal troops and marshals on the University of
Mississippi campus to ensure the right of a black student to attend classes.
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