NEW ORLEANS — Louisiana’s governor on Wednesday posthumously pardoned Homer Plessy, the Black man whose arrest for refusing to leave a whites-only railroad car in 1892 to protest racial segregation sparked the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that cemented “separate but equal” into law for half a century.
Justice John Harlan was the only dissenting voice, writing that he believed the ruling “will, in time, prove to be quite as pernicious as the decision made by this tribunal in the Dred Scott Case” — an 1857 decision that said no Black person who had been enslaved or was descended from a slave could ever become a U.S. citizen.
Plessy was a member of the Citizens Committee, a New Orleans group trying to overcome laws that rolled back post-Civil War advances in equality.The 30-year-old shoemaker lacked the business, political and educational accomplishments of most of the other members, Keith Weldon Medley wrote in the book ”We As Freemen: Plessy v. Ferguson.” But his light skin — court papers described him as someone whose “one eighth African blood” was “not discernable” — positioned him for the train car protest.
Keith Plessy, whose great-great-grandfather was Plessy’s cousin, said donations collected by the committee paid the fine and other legal costs. But Plessy returned to obscurity, and never returned to shoemaking.
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JBE the goat for this
Decades behind reality as always that state
Power Over All Democracy 46 Republican President Mark Patrick Seymour
Nice PhotoOp. But I am often baffled by these things. Does this lessen the Injustice done, the COURAGE shown, the Struggles endured, to have a Do-Gooder erase(?) the CatalystOfChange with no more effort than a pen swipe? I'm more concerned with teaching kids Civics & History!
How white of him.
Plessy v Ferguson, I believe 1896, held that 'separate but equal' met Constitutional muster. It wasn't until Brown v Topeka Board of Education, 1954, that integration of public schools ('with all deliberate speed,' which meant many years later) became the law of the land.
Disgusting.
For about seven decades now, government has been ceding power to the most savage among us. The declining standing of the country is showing the results.
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