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Tuesday 7 June 2011

Plessy and Ferguson: Progeny of a Divisive Court Decision Unite

Keith Plessy and Phoebe Ferguson decided to start a new civil rights education organization that would bear their famous names.

Plessy and Ferguson: Progeny of a Divisive Court Decision Unite

Written by Robert Barnes
When Keith Plessy and Phoebe Ferguson decided to start a new civil rights education organization that would bear their famous names, they sealed the deal in a fitting local spot: Cafe Reconcile.
They represent the opposing principals in one of the Supreme Court's landmark decisions, Plessy v. Ferguson, which upheld the constitutionality of Jim Crow laws mandating segregation under the "separate but equal" doctrine. It stood from 1896 until the court's historic Brown v. Board of Education ruling in 1954.
The descendant of the man who tested Louisiana's law requiring separate railroad cars for whites and blacks and the great-great-granddaughter of the judge who upheld it met in 2004.
The truth is, no reconciliation was required.
"The first thing I said to her," recalled Plessy, "was, 'Hey, it's no longer Plessy versus Ferguson. It's Plessy and Ferguson.' "
Her first reaction was to apologize.
"I don't know why," she said in an interview. "It's just that I felt the burden of it, this great injustice."
Plessy's response?
"I said, 'You weren't alive during that time. I wasn't either. It's time for us to change that whole image.'  "
So the Plessy & Ferguson Foundation was born, and on Tuesday it will celebrate another anniversary of Homer Adolph Plessy's decision to buy a railroad ticket for the June 7, 1892, train trip from New Orleans to Covington, on the other side of Lake Pontchartrain.
The organization seeks to highlight the historic moments in New Orleans' struggle for racial equality and hopes to remind the public of the story behind the famous case. It was, Plessy and Ferguson said, a forerunner of the legal strategies and civil disobedience that took root in the civil rights struggles of the 20th century.
Read the rest of this article at the Washington Post.

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