Imagine isolating and live in a country that complies with apartheid law. In 1896, the US Supreme Court ruled that the State of Louisiana stipulated that the equivalent equivalent accommodation conditions of Caucasian and African-American in the state were constitutional. According to the laws of Louisiana state, he is legally considered a "colored person", but in Pressy versus Ferguson, Homer Priscie can become a white passerby. This is because the Louisiana legislation prohibits taking a white bus only because he has one-eighth of African descent.
The struggle for racial equality in the United States of the 1960s spread all over the country and entered the court of the United States Supreme Court from an isolated luncheon counter. It affects every aspect of American life including the federal government. As the National Archives and Records Management Agency (NARA) maintains and provides continually valued federal records, the assets it holds are the sources of precious literature in this era. Federal records can reveal the way and cause of struggle, the events that influenced the development of the United States in the decades of the 1960s, and the role of the federal government in struggle. Over the past decade, NARA has increased the number of possessions, possibly for the first time providing records and providing interesting insights on the role of the federation in the civil rights struggle of the 1960s.
Imagine isolating and live in a country that complies with apartheid law. In 1896, the US Supreme Court ruled that the State of Louisiana stipulated that the equivalent equivalent accommodation conditions of Caucasian and African-American in the state were constitutional. According to the laws of Louisiana state, he is legally considered a "colored person", but in Pressy versus Ferguson, Homer Priscie can become a white passerby. - 1950 America is in the competition. African-Americans use separate bathrooms, separate schools and are not the most respected. The world is a very different place, and isolation is standard. But today, most Americans believe that we have overcome this inequality. But we are true. Looking at the educational system of today's society, it is easy to find all the defects in it.