Separate but equal

Plessy v. Ferguson

"Following the Civil War, feelings were mixed about the freedoms that Lincoln had granted to African American citizens through his Emancipation Proclamation. A group in Louisiana decided to challenge a state law that required companies to have railway cars separated by race. They orchestrated a situation in which a white-looking black man would sit in the white only part of the train and announce he was colored. In a landmark decision that supported the racist feelings in some areas of the country following the Civil War, the effort to secure equal rights at this time failed. The book provides insight into the details of the case and also includes questions to consider, primary source documents, and a chronology"--Amazon.com.

9780766084346
book

Holdings

hidmidmiidnidwidlocation_codelocationbarcodecallnumdeweycreatedupdated
114944648331812152596437793318BRMI115BRMS46884342.73 RAU342.7315814652241708963493
125003949252462170596437793318HFHS264HFHS630083342.7 RAU342.715814652241708963493
181938754208641779596437793318CCHS138CCHS102219342.730 RAU342.7315825759371662467957
283840163210382133596437793318HOS269HOS0047676310 Rau31016377825731695044385
347285568484511595596437793318SOTA410T 7401874342.73 RAU342.7316407292551640729255
363315669653272155596437793318EIEH160EIEH39324342.7308 RAU342.7316729293981708963493