Source: https://blog.gale.com/the-aclus-role-in-brown-v-board-of-education/
Timestamp: 2019-04-25 11:56:04+00:00

Document:
Because of Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), public schools and other public facilities in the United States could be legally segregated by race if there was equality between what was available for blacks and whites. In reality, racially segregated facilities, including public schools, for African-Americans were inferior to those for whites. By the early 1950s, as part of a wider movement of presenting legal challenges to aspects of racial segregation, lawyers for the NAACP began filing class action lawsuits in various states seeking to allow black students to attend white public schools.
One such case was filed against the school board in Topeka, Kansas. Oliver Brown tried to enroll his daughter Linda in a white public school but she was denied admittance because of her race. Filing a lawsuit against the school board, he argued that schools for blacks and whites were unequal and would never be equal. Further, Brown asserted that this inequality violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution. Though a federal district court dismissed Brown’s claim, Brown appealed to the Supreme Court. His case was taken and consolidated with other school segregation suits. Thurgood Marshall of the NAACP served as the plaintiffs’ chief counsel for the case.
The ACLU took part in the Brown v. Board of Education case as a friend of the court, assisting the Browns as well as plaintiffs in other suits that became part of this legal action. The ACLU submitted an amicus curiae brief in support of Brown’s case as well as providing additional legal advice to the attorneys arguing the case, with whom they corresponded extensively.
After the ruling, members of the ACLU sent letters to Marshall after his victory. ACLU staff counsel Herbert Monte Levy wrote one such note. It began, “It is rather difficult to think up appropriate congratulatory words when a man wins perhaps the most important case in the past 100 years.” In his response, Marshall thanked Levy and concluded, “With the assurance of such continued cooperation, we look to the future with renewed confidence.” Because of his distinguished career as a litigator—including his role in Brown v. Board of Education—Marshall was appointed to the Supreme Court in 1967. He was the first African-American to serve as a justice on the highest court of the United States.
Though the ACLU, NAACP, and many others were pleased with the ruling, they understood that more legal action was needed to ensure desegregation took place. In the news release put out by the ACLU after the Brown v. Board of Education decision, Edward J. Ennis, the vice chairman of the ACLU board of directors, noted, “We hope that those who may disagree with the Court’s decision will not impede its finding that segregation per se is contrary to the Constitution.” Brown v. Board of Education made segregated public schools unconstitutional, but it took several more Supreme Court cases to solidify this concept. In 1955, for example, the Court ordered the states to actually integrate their public schools. According to letters in the ACLU archive related to implementation of the Brown ruling, the ACLU did not file a brief in this case because they believed that they could not add anything of value to the NAACP’s argument.
Though public school integration took more than a decade in some parts of the United States, Brown v. Board of Education greatly influenced later decisions related to legalized inequalities. The ruling especially emboldened and gave legal muscle to other civil rights challenges, rulings, and laws. Additionally, the case helped usher in profound cultural changes in the United States and had a wide impact on the lives of both black and white Americans. By gaining access to better educational facilities, many African-Americans ultimately saw an overall increase in incomes and upward social mobility, and were able to fully participate in civic life. The support provided by organizations like the ACLU in legal cases like Brown v. Board of Education helped ensure that these transformations were able to take place.
I would like information about where the letter from Herbert Monte Levy to Thurgood Marshall is located. Is it currently digitized on Gale as part of Princeton’s ACLU collection?
Hey Emily, Yes that letter was digitized from the Princeton collection. It is part of the first installment of the series.
Feel free to reach out to me directly at kevin.kohls@cengage.com if you have any other questions.

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