Homer Plessy was arrested for refusing to vacate his seat in a segregated rail car in Louisiana setting off a milestone court case the enshrined Jim Crow legislation as legal. |
Most people who hear of the Supreme Court case of Plessy v. Ferguson, in which the court ruled that separate
but equal accommodations for African Americans were legal under the Constitution, assume that it arose
from a school case. That’s because Plessy v. Ferguson was the precedent upset in 1952 by the Brown
v. Board of Education ruling striking
down school segregation. But the
original case had more in common
with Rosa Parks.
On June 8, 1892 Homer Plessy was arrested in New Orleans for
refusing to vacate a segregated railroad
car. Plessy, a Creole of mixed Black
and White heritage but having only 1/8
“Negro blood,” (an octoroon in
the precise racial categorizations of
the day) could probably have passed for
White in any other place. But in New Orleans, where graduations of heritage were observed in exquisite detail, he was
either personally recognized by the conductor or was recognized style of dress or speech.
This contemporary illustration of Plessy's confrontation with the conductor clearly misrepresented reality. In fact Plessy could have "passed for White" almost anywhere else. |
It was a planned act of civil disobedience by the Comité des Citoyens
(Committee of Citizens)
made up of the educated Free People of Color in New
Orleans. He was convicted in local courts, fined $25—a hefty sum in those days—and sentenced
to 20 days in jail. On appeal he did not even argue that the State
of Louisiana had the no right to
discriminate against Blacks, but that his preponderance of White blood should have been enough to use the
restricted cars.
John Howard Ferguson was the judge
in the case who ruled that the Thirteenth
and Fourteenth Amendments to the
U.S. Constitution did not prevent the state from enacting
laws separating the races on rail road cars. Plessy’s appeal sought a writ of prohibition to bar the judge
from imposing the sentence. After losing the appeal to the Louisiana Supreme Court as expected,
the case was appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Albion W. Tourgée, a former Radical
Republican and founder of a pioneering Civil Rights organization,
the National Citizens'’ Rights Association, and former U.S. Solicitor General Samuel
F. Phillips represented
Plessy ably before the Court. But on May
18 in a stunning 7-1 decision the Court not only upheld Plessy’s
sentence and conviction, but issued the infamous “separate but equal” ruling
written by Justice Henry Billings
Brown which not only protected
existing discriminatory laws, but set off a stampede to enact
segregation of all manor of facilities across not only the Old South,
but in other parts of the nation as well.
A clearly shocked Justice John Harlan wrote in his dissenting
opinion:
The present decision...will not only stimulate aggressions, more or
less brutal and irritating, upon the admitted rights of colored citizens, but will encourage the belief that it is possible, by means of state
enactments, to defeat the beneficent purposes which the people of the United
States had in view when they adopted the recent [the 13th and 14th] amendments of the
Constitution.
Justice John Marshal Harlan became known as the Great Dissenter for his fiery objection to the 7-1 Supreme Court decision that established the "separate but equal" rule. |
A largely forgotten 1946 case Morgan v. Virginia finally overturned the Plessy precedent for interstate travel, but allowed restriction to remain on
transportation that remained within a state’s boundary. It wasn’t until Brown v. the Board of Education that the whole principle of “separate but equal” was over turned.
Plessy retreated into obscurity following the case. He sold
insurance and died almost unnoticed
in 1925 at the age of 61.
No comments:
Post a Comment