Plessy vs.
Ferguson:
Separate isn't Equal
How truly equal is “separate but equal”? How
can true equality exist between two peoples who are racially segregated
everywhere they go? Apparently, this was not an issue for the United States
Supreme Court when it decided on the case of Plessy vs. Ferguson in 1896. The
Court ruled in favor of separate areas for blacks and whites as long as they
were equal, a decision which would prove to hold for almost 60 years until being
overruled. This was a situation when the United States Supreme Court misused its
power to interpret the Constitution in a way to benefit all peoples of the
country. The ruling resulted in a major setback in the struggle for equality
between races in the United States and set the stage for racial segregation
within the South until the overruling in 1954. 1896 needs to be a constant
reminder to the people of our country of the horrible damages done to society
when the highest court of law in the land rules against justice and
equality.
The case of Plessy vs. Ferguson was one of a combination of
rulings passed by the U.S. and state Supreme Courts after Reconstruction. Many
of these decisions allowed and even required Jim Crow segregation laws in
Southern states. They returned to whites the superiority over blacks that the
13th Amendment had taken away from them after the Civil War. Plessy vs. Ferguson
was the final step in erasing the policies put in place during Reconstruction.
The Reconstruction Era (1867-1877) was an atte
mpt by the Union to put back together a war-torn South. Northerners
were sent into southern states to set up Reconstruction governments, which were
completely in place by 1870. The Reconstruction Era saw many positive changes in
the lives of African Americans: for example, the number of black children in
school rose from 25,000 in 1860 to 149,581 in 1870 and the number of black
voters rose from 0 in 1860 to 700,000 in 1867 (all men of course) . However,
when Congress withdrew federal troops from the Southern states in 1887, marking
the end of Reconstruction, conditions deteriorated quickly for blacks living
there. While the 15th Amendment in 1870 had legally given blacks the right to
vote, grandfather clauses and poll taxes made it almost impossible for them to
exercise this right. The Ku Klux Klan was inciting race riots, and, starting in
1882 and up until 1968, a total of over 4,700 blacks were lynched . Segregation
also took off in many Southern states, as whites searched for this lost feeling
of superiority. When blacks went to the courts to try to reclaim equality and
justice, they were harshly turned away. In 1878, the United States Supreme Court
ruled that segregation on common carriers (such as railway cars and buses) could
not be prohibited by state legislatures. In 1890, the Court took another step in
ruling that Mississippi’s requiring segregation on common carriers was
lawful. The Louisiana legislature also pushed for segregation. It passed a bill
in 1890 which said that “separate but equal” areas for black and white
passengers on trains was lawful and that violators could be fined or jailed.
This is where the case of Homer Plessy comes in. Plessy, a young shoemaker who
was one-eighth black and seven-eighths white, boarded a Louisiana state rail car
on June 7, 1892. Backed by two groups fighting racism, Comite des Citoyens and
the black newspaper, The Crusader, he sat down in the ‘White Only’ rail car, and
refused to move when asked to do so. Plessy was immediately jailed. Homer Plessy
and the groups supporting him took their case to the local circuit court, judged
by John Howard Ferguson, the Louisiana Supreme Court, and finally to the United
States Supreme Court. At the highest level, the case was decided on May 18th,
1896, in favor of Judge Ferguson and the state of Louisiana. By this time, the
lasting damage had already been done. The Supreme Court had given Southern
states all the permission they needed to let any remaining equality between the
races fade away, to be replaced by the monstrous Jim Crow laws standing in its
way.
Even though the Supreme Court had ruled in favor of these separate
areas as long as they were equal, it is evident that true equality was never an
objective or goal within the South. “Laws permitting, and even requiring (the
separation of blacks and whites) in places where they are liable to be brought
into contact do not necessarily imply the inferiority of either race to the
other.......... The argument also assumes that social prejudice may be overcome
by legislation, and that equal rights cannot be secured to the Negro except by
an enforced commingling of the two races. We cannot accept this proposition. If
the two races are to meet on terms of social equality, it must be the result of
natural affinities, a mutual ap
preciation of each other’s merits and a voluntary consent of
individuals.........” (from the United States Supreme Court case of Plessy vs.
Ferguson). But how possible is it for two peoples to have “a mutual appreciation
of each other’s merits” if everywhere they look around themselves they are told
that they cannot ride on the same train car, drink from the same fountain, sit
on the same bench, or learn at the same school? How can these peoples be
separated in everything they do, everywhere they go, and still be expected “to
meet on terms of social equality”? Frederick Douglass didn’t think they could.
In his 1872 article for The New National Era newspaper, he wrote, “We want mixed
schools.....because we want to do away with a system that exalts one class and
debases another..... We look to mixed schools to teach that worth and ability
are to be the criterion of manhood and not race and color.”
Southern
states took advantage of the Plessy vs. Ferguson decision legalizing segregation
and began to pass laws like those in Mississippi, requiring segregation and
stating that anyone not following the law could be jailed. Though the Supreme
Court accepted the proposition that these people could maintain their full
equality even while being racially separated, Southern states continued to push
this ruling further and further. Peaceful acts by people trying to regain
justice often sparked violent responses. For over half a century, these rulings
continued to tear apart black and white communities within the South, eating
away at any hopes of equality and peacefulness between them.
Jim Crow
segregation laws remained legal and in existence for almost 60 years , until a
new panel of United States Supreme Court justices ruled that segregation
violated rights granted by the Constitution. These “separate but equal”
facilities were finally ruled out of existence by the May 17th, 1954 Supreme
Court ruling in the case Brown vs. Board of Education of Topeka.
There the
Court ruled that segregation in schools shows inferiority toward minority
children, and ended required racial separation. “Segregation of white and
colored children in public schools has a detrimental effect upon colored
children. The impact is greater when it is the sanction of the law; for the
policy of separating the races is us
ually
interpreted as denoting inferiority of the the Negro group. A sense of
inferiority affects the motivation of the child to learn....... We conclude that
in the field of public education the doctrine of ‘separate but equal’ has no
place. Separate educational facilities are inherently unequal.........” (from
the United States Supreme Court case of Brown vs. Board of Education of Topeka).
Though this specific case outlawed racial separation only in public schools,
segregation of any kind was no longer considered lawful. Despite this and other
rulings, it was another battle to have the decisions enforced. Many white
southerners liked the feeling of superiority, and felt this would disappear
should all public areas become racially mixed. It took the Civil Rights
Movement, a time when thousands of blacks and whites joined together to fight
this segregation and inequality to kill these practices within the South. In
some cases, federal troops had to come into Southern states and make sure that
these rulings were followed, and that violence didn’t arise in the process.
While desegregation took a lot of work over time, Brown vs. Board of Education
did turn the tide of segregation in many ways, as the United States government
let the South know that it would no longer tolerate racial
separation.
How civil is a society in which people are judged and
separated into groups by the color of their skin? The Jim Crow laws of the late
1800’s and early 1900’s contributed to the breakdown of our society, destroying
the work of Reconstruction in the South. They widened racial gaps and allowed
states to once again single out blacks as the inferior race. When the United
States Supreme Court finally stood up against segregation, ruling that racial
separation does deprive the rights granted by the 14th Amendment, many common
practices were forced to change. The Civil Rights Movement also helped to
abolish these practices, but not without much violent resistance. For almost 60
years, segregation had lawfully divided up the peoples of our country and
created a racial inequality which had a devastating affect on society. The
history of segregation and the Courts’ role in it reminds us that the Supreme
Court has not and may not always interpret the Constitution in the most equal
and beneficial way. When this happens, the citizens of the United States must be
willing to join together to overcome the law, if need be, in order to save
equality and justice.
~Bibliography~
Case of Plessy vs.
Ferguson,
http://www.coursea.matrix.msu.edu/~hst203/documents/plessy.html
Case of Brown vs. Board of Education on
Topeka, Kansas,
http://www.coursea.matrix.msu.edu/~hst203/documents/brown.html
Case of Plessy vs.
Ferguson:
http://www.civnet.org/resources/teach/basic/part6/33.htm
Cozzens, Lisa. Plessy vs.
Ferguson:
http://www.watson.org/~lisa/blackhistory/post-civilwar/plessy.html 1995
Encyclopedia Britannica. Jim
Crow Law:
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1999-2000
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http://oyez.nwu.edu/cases.cgi?command=show&case_id=307&page=abstract
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Kansas:
http://oyez.nwu.edu/cases.cgi?command=show&case_id=51&page=abstract
McQuigg, Jackson. North Carolina
Transportation Museum. Southern Railway
1211 Segregated Coach:
http://www.ci.salisbury.nc.us/nctrans/cars/1211info.htm
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