The US Supreme Court case on Brown v. the Board of Education, Topeka, Kansas (1954), declares "separate but equal is not ok" in school education. The Supreme Court case of Plessy v. Ferguson was being used as a precedent to keep schools segregated. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, (NAACP), played a major role in helping with the cases of underprivileged schools. The Supreme Court Justices had a difficult decision to make, because they had to break precedent. .
Plessy v. Ferguson was the case that was being used as a precedent to keep schools segregated. The way America was at that time was separate but equal. Children in a "blacks only" school had to be the same for the "whites only" school. It was not only schools but in all public places that needed to be separate but equal. The only reason the Plessy v. Ferguson case was challenged was because the two schools were not equal. Money, supplies, and transportation were incomparable. Most "black" schools were deprived from being equal from the "white" schools. .
The NAACP played a major role in helping with the cases of underprivileged schools. They are the only people to take the cases of segregated schools. The chief counsel over the cases for black schools was Thurgood Marshall. He looked over cases in Kansas, South Carolina, Virginia, and Delaware. Just to be in the court rooms, the NAACP used a lot of their resources to be there to argue the cases. Desegregation was a path that they thought of not taking. The dispute was that not all people viewed desegregation as a good thing, even the African Americans. The NAACP saw segregation as a good thing but it has to be equal, and in truth that could not happen. The only way that schools can be equal is to be together so that there is no usage of favoring a certain group. That is why the NAACP decided to go as far to desegregate.
The Supreme Court Justices had a difficult decision to make, because they had to break precedent.