Skip to content

The Cases

--:--
--:--

Narrator
Narrator
The landmark 1954 Brown v. Board case was actually made up of five separate lawsuits. The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund—the civil rights group behind the suits—carefully chose them to represent a variety of circumstances and locations where public schools were segregated by race.
Supreme Court docket book entry, November 19, 1951. National Archives and Records Administration.
Supreme Court docket book entry, November 19, 1951. National Archives and Records Administration.
Linda Brown is seated third from the left. Her father, Oliver Brown, is standing second from the left.
Linda Brown is seated third from the left. Her father, Oliver Brown, is standing second from the left.
Monroe Elementary School of Topeka for Blacks.
Monroe Elementary School of Topeka for Blacks.
Sumner Elementary School of Topeka for Whites.
Sumner Elementary School of Topeka for Whites.
Liberty Hill, a Colored School in South Carolina
Liberty Hill, a Colored School in South Carolina
Moton High School for Black, in Virginia
Moton High School for Black, in Virginia
Segregated high school interior, Virginia.
Segregated high school interior, Virginia.
Barbara Johns is in the foreground.
Barbara Johns is in the foreground.
Separate but equal.
Separate but equal.
The first Black students to integrate Delaware's  Claymont High School in 1952
The first Black students to integrate Delaware's Claymont High School in 1952