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Follow the civil rights quest for integrated schools from the beginning in 1849 through the 1954 Supreme Court decision in Brown v. the Topeka Board of Education and the struggle that ensued for decades following in the most reluctant school districts and regions in the U.S..
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1950s, civil rights movement, equality of treatment, integration, naacp, national association for the advancement of colored people, racial discrimination, racial segregation, school desegregation, school segregation, segregate, segregated schools, segregation in public schools, separate but equal, supreme court decisions, written records, african american plaintiffs, brown v topeka board of education, brown v. the topeka board of education, charles sumner, chief justice earl warren, chief justice fred m. vinson, digital history, earl warren, fred m. vinson, kenneth clark, linda brown, may 17, 1954, naacp legal defense fund, oliver brown, president eisenhower, president truman, robert morris, sarah robert, topeka school board, u.s. senator charles sumner, challenging segregation, segregated schools unconstitutional, segregation in the 1950's, segregation in the fifties, separate facilities, brown v. topeka board of education
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- Knovation Readability Score: 5 (1 low difficulty, 5 high difficulty)
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