Brown vs Board of Education case by Supreme Court of United States was a landmark judgement in 1954 that declared that racial segregation in school was inherently unequal.
<u>Explanation:</u>
The history traces back where Texas had no law school for black students and in order to comply with "separate but equal" law, State of Texas built a law school for blacks. Brown case initiated when Brown family filed a lawsuit against a school that denied admission to their daughter as a student stating that she has to approach only blacks only School.
The court case that established the principle that separate education is inherently unequal was Brown v. Board of Education.
<u>The Brown v. Board of Education</u> was a case in which<u> the finding of the Supreme Court of the United States in 1954 was that separate education, that is to say racial segregation in schools, was unconstitutional</u>. This case started when that the Brown family filled a lawsuit against a school that refused to accept their daughter as a student there for considering that she had to go to a blacks-only school. As a result, <u>the Court established the principle that separate education is inherently unequal</u>.