In this landmark judgment, the Supreme Court declared racial segregation of students in public schools to be unconstitutional. By overturning the "separate but equal" tenet outlined in the <u>1896 Plessy v. Ferguson decision</u>, it signified the end of officially sanctioned racial segregation in American schools.
The "separate but equal" doctrine, which allowed states and school districts to designate some schools as "whites-only" and others as "Negroes-only," was abolished by the Brown decision. More significantly, by bringing attention to the oppression of blacks in the country.
Only 1% of black pupils in the Deep South attended schools with white students ten years after Brown v. Board of Education (1954). In the famous 1954 Supreme Court case Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, the justices unanimously ruled that racial segregation of students in public schools was unconstitutional.
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The correct question is:
Ten years after Brown v. Board of Education (1954), only ________ percent of black children in the Deep South attended school with white children.
I don't know if these are correct but here are some
wigwam houses,long houses tepees,grass houses,wattle and daub houses,chickees,adobe houses,and lots more
Answer:
It caused the Hawaiian sugarcane market to be undersold by the American
producers which led to an economic depression that swept the islands
Explanation:
McKinley was the representative of an industrial group interested in high protectionist tariffs. Due to his position on this issue and the support of James Sherman for the presidency in 1888, McKinley got a seat on the budget committee of the House of Representatives, and also became close to influential Ohio entrepreneur Markus Hannah. In 1889, McKinley was elected chairman of the committee and became the main author of the law bearing his name in 1890 (McKinley Tariff Bill), which established high import tariffs. The law slightly reduced duties on some types of goods and significantly (up to 18%) increased them on others. At the same time, it gave the president broad powers to raise and lower tariff rates for Latin American states for political reasons or in the form of reprisals.
The McKinley Tariff eliminated the trade advantage of Hawaii sugar producers, who relied overwhelmingly on American markets, - it was done by entering sugar on the duty-free list and granting a bounty to American sugar growers. Thus, the Hawaiian economy experienced depression, and as a result, growers of white sugar advocated for establishment of an American protectorate or outright annexation.