Thursday, May 16, 2019
Homer Adolph Plessy v Ferguson
In 1890, the State of Louisiana passed Act 111 that demand separate accommodations for African Americans and Whites on railroads, including separate railway cars, though it specified that the accommodations must be kept equal. On any other day in 1892, Plessy with his pale skin color could hold in ridden in the car restricted to white passengers without notice. He was classified 7/8 white or octoroon according to the language of the time. Although it is often interpreted as Plessy had only one great grandmother of African descent, both of his parents are identified as free persons of color on his birth certificate.The racial miscellanea is based on appearance rather than genealogy. Hoping to strike down segregation natural laws, the Citizens Committee of New siege of Orleans (Comite des Citoyens) recruited Plessy to violate Louisianas 1890 separate-car law. To pose a clear test, the Citizens Committee gave advance notice of Plessys intent to the railroad, which had remote the la w because it required adding more cars to its trains. On June 7, 1892, Plessy bought a first-class ticket for the commuter train that ran to Covington, sit down down in the car for white riders only and the conductor asked whether he was a colored man.The perpetration also hired a private detective with arrest powers to take Plessy off the train at Press and Royal streets, to ensure that he was charged with violating the states separate-car law. In his case, Homer Adolph Plessy v. The State of Louisiana, Plessy argued that the state law which required East Louisiana Railroad to segregate trains had denied him his rights under the Thirteenth and ordinal Amendments of the unify States Constitution. However, the pretend presiding over his case, John Howard Ferguson, ruled that Louisiana had the right to regulate railroad companies as long as they operated within state boundaries.Plessy sought a writ of prohibition. The Committee of Citizens took Plessys appeal to the exacting mo tor hotel of Louisiana, where he again found an unreceptive ear, as the state Supreme Court upheld Judge Fergusons ruling. Undaunted, the Committee appealed to the linked States Supreme Court in 1896. Two legal briefs were submitted on Plessys behalf. One was signed by Albion W. Tourgee and James C. Walker and the other by Samuel F. Phillips and his legal partner F. D. McKenney. Oral arguments were held before the Supreme Court on April 13, 1896.Tourgee and Phillips appeared in the courtroom to speak on behalf of Plessy. It would become one of the most famous decisions in American history because, for the first time, it established that state-mandated racial segregation was protected by federal law. Arrested, tried and convicted of a violation of one of Louisianas racial segregation laws, he appealed through Louisiana state courts to the U. S. Supreme Court, and lost. The resulting separate-but-equal decision against him had wide consequences for civil rights in the United States .The decision legalized state-mandated segregation anywhere in the United States, as long as the facilities provided for both blacks and whites were putatively equal. In a 7 to 1 decision handed down on May 18, 1896, (Justice David Josiah Brewer did not participate) the Court rejected Plessys arguments based on the Fourteenth Amendment, seeing no way in which the Louisiana statute violated it. In addition, the mass of the Court rejected the view that the Louisiana law implied any inferiority of blacks, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. Instead, it contended that the law separated the two races as a matter of public policy.
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