Did the US Supreme Court order racially segregated public schools to integrate in Brown v. Board of Education II?

Brown v. Board of Education II 349 US 294 (1955) Answer Yes. The Court declared segregation unconstitutional in Brown v.

Board of Education 374 US 483 (1954), and ordered integration, overseen by the US District Courts, in Brown v. Board of Education (II) 349 US 294 (1955) Explanation The US Supreme Court first declared segregation in public education unconstitutional in 1954, in the consolidated cases heard under the caption Brown v. Board of Education 347 US 483 (1954).

This overturned the decision in Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), that allowed "separate but equal" accommodations for African-Americans in most areas of life, including education. In Brown the Supreme Court determined that "separated but equal" wasn't equal, and unfairly branded African-American students as inferior The Court recognized, however, that the logistics of integration would be difficult in many school districts, so they set a future date to determine the practical aspects of their earlier ruling.In Brown v.

Board of Education (II) 349 US 294 (1955), commonly known as Brown II the Court ordered the US District Courts to oversee application of the mandate requiring public schools to integrate with "all deliberate speed Although most people consider 1954 the year the Court ordered integration, the mandate wasn't handed down until 1955 in the separate, but related Brown II case.

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