-
Period: to
Plessy v. Furgerson
-
Plessy v. Furgerson
Homer Plessy was born in New Orleans Louisiana -
Plessy
Homer Plessy went to jail for sitting in 'Whites only' section on the East Louisiana Railroad . But the men sat him in the whites only section but Homer Plessy told them that he was black but he refused to go in the black part of the train. And he brought the first class tickets -
Homer Plessy
This is Homer Plessy, he is 1/8 of black heritige and 7/8 of white heritige so he was considered black -
Homer Plessy
When Homer Plessy loss the supreme court case of 1864, the court made laws sperate but equal but the civil rights movement still wasn't over yet -
Plessy v. Furgerson
This is the paper that the supreme court ratified on the Homer Plessy v. Furgerson trial and Homer Plessy loss the case -
Plessy furegerson
This is the quote from the Brown V. Board of education trial -
Plessy v Furgerson
Homer Plessy Died on March 1 in 1925 -
Homer Plessy
Since Homer Plessy loss the case over the East Louisiana Railroad company, the train was then created seprate but equal. -
Plessy
Plessy was vice president of the justice protective educational and social club -
Plessy v. Furgerson
The three parts of court is firstly, the local court, secondly, the state court and lastly, the supreme court which Homer Plessy wom over the east luisiana railroad company -
Plessy v. Furgerson
The 14th Amendment is that no laws shall make any laws which denies to any person within it's jurisdiction the egual protection of the laws. -
Plessy v. Furgerson
Homer Plessy was seated in the '' Whites only '' part of the East Luisiana Train comany -
Plessy v. Furgerson
This is the Supreme Court Judges that judged the Plessy v. Furgerson act of 1896 -
Homer
The Civil Rights act ended on 1964, but Homer Plessy was already dead unfourtually.