New York Amsterdam News Issue # 2 January 13 - 19, 2022

Page 22

22 • January 13, 2022 - January 19, 2022

THE NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS

IN

THE

CLASSROOM

Homer Plessy, a civil rights activist who battled Jim Crow laws

By HERB BOYD Special to the AmNews

Protective, Educational, and Social Club, a group dedicated to reforming public education. And in 1892 he was a member of Comite des Citoyens that committed acts of civil disobedience to challenge the state’s Separate Car Act and the separate accommodations for Blacks and whites on

Last week, 130 years after Homer Plessy was ejected from a whites-only train and triggered the “separate but equal” Supreme Court ruling that enshrined him in history, he was finally pardoned. Down across the years the infamous Homer Plessy Plessy v. Ferguson decision of 1896 symbolized segregation and stood as law until Brown v. Board of Education in 1954. But who was Homer Plessy and what happened to him after the historic moment of injustice? What year he was born and his name and pedigree is a jumble of information. Was he born Homer Adolph Plessy or Homere Patris Plessy in 1862 or 1863? No matter the confusion, he was clearly born a free person of color in a Creole-speaking family. His father, Joseph Adolphe Plessy, was a carpenter and his mother, Rosa Deberegue, was a seamstress. Coming of age during the Reconstruction-era in Louisiana, he attended integrated schools in a society where Black men had the franchise and interracial marriage was legal. But with the end of Reconstruction, particularly the Hayes-Tilden Electoral trains. On June 7, 1892, he purCollege vote and the compro- chased a ticket for the “whites mise that brought about the only” first-class section of the removal of federal troops train and was soon arrested by from the South, many of the a private detective hired by the privileges enjoyed by Plessy group. and others no longer existIn a state criminal district ed. Meanwhile, Plessy, like court, Judge John Howard his stepfather, became a shoe- Ferguson ruled against Plessy, maker and was employed at and thereby upheld the law on Brito’s shoe-making company the ground that the state had in New Orleans. By the 1880s, the right to regulate railroads Plessy joined a number of ac- within its borders. Plessy imtivists in the fight to restore mediately appealed the detheir civil rights. In 1887, he cision, taking his case to the served as vice president of the Supreme Court, which heard 50 person Justice, the case for four years in 1896, ruling 7-to-1 in favor of Lou-

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isiana. In effect, the legal basis of Jim Crow was sanctioned and would be in place until Brown v. the Board of Education in 1954. As for Plessy after his role in the historic decision, he returned to his profession as a shoemaker, but in the advent of major shoemaking com-

panies his services suffered, forcing him to find a new occupation. Among the menial jobs he took was one as a laborer in a warehouse, then as a clerk, and ultimately as insurance salesman for the People’s Insurance Company. Other than his activism and having his case go before the Supreme Court, his life was not exceptional. Before his pardoning, other efforts had been made to mark his place in history, including the creation of the Plessy & Ferguson

Foundation of New Orleans that honored him in 2009 with the placing of a historical marker at the site of his arrest in 1892. He died on March 1, 1925 in Metairie, Louisiana and is buried in New Orleans. His wife, Louise, died the same year. They had three children. We offer here the lone dissent to Justice Henry Billings Brown’s majority decision by Justice John Marshall Harlan: “I am of the opinion that the state of Louisiana is inconsistent with the personal liberty of citizens, white and Black, in that state, and hostile to both the spirit and letter of the constitution of the United States. If laws of like character should be enacted in the several states of the Union, the effect would be in the highest degree mischievous. Slavery, as an institution tolerated by law, would, it is true, have disappeared from our country; but there would remain a power in the states, by sinister legislation, to interfere with the full enjoyment of the blessings of freedom, to regulate civil rights, common to all citizens, upon the basis of race, and to place in a condition of legal inferiority a large body of American citizens, now constituting a part of the political community, called the ‘People of the United States,’ for whom, and by whom through representatives, our government is administered. Such a system is inconsistent with the guaranty given by the constitution to each state of a republican form of government, and may be stricken down by congressional action, or by the courts in the discharge of their solemn duty to maintain the supreme law of the land, anything in the constitution or laws of any state to the contrary notwithstanding. For the reason stated, I am constrained to withhold my assent from the opinion and judgment of the majority.”

ACTIVITIES FIND OUT MORE Books on African American history have at least a footnote or two on his activism, particularly historic institutions in Louisiana. DISCUSSION More needs to be said about his early years and the years after he gained notoriety. PLACE IN CONTEXT He was born just before the Civil War erupted and lived to see the dawn of the Harlem Renaissance.

THIS WEEK IN BLACK HISTORY Jan. 12, 1971: The Congressional Black Caucus was founded in the nation’s capital. Jan. 12, 1890: Famed educator Mordecai Johnson was born in Paris, Tenn. Some dispute this birthdate with it variously being listed as Jan. 4. He died in 1976. Jan. 14, 1916: Novelist and political activist John O. Killens was born in Macon, Ga. He died in 1987.


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