Examples of Browder v. Gayle in the following topics:
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Montgomery and Protests
- Pressure increased across the country as the federal district court ruled that Alabama's racial segregation laws for buses were unconstitutional in Browder v.
- Gayle - a case heard before a three-judge panel of the United States District Court for the Middle District of Alabama.
- Browder, Susie McDonald, Mary Louise Smith and Jeanette Reese, Colvin was one of the five plaintiffs in the case.
- The boycott officially ended December 20, 1956, after Mayor Gayle was handed official written notice by federal marshals, after 381 days.
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The Emergence of the Civil Rights Movement
- The campaign lasted from December 5, 1955—when Rosa Parks, an African American woman, was arrested for refusing to surrender her seat to a white person—to December 20, 1956, when a federal ruling, Browder v.
- Gayle, took effect, and led to a United States Supreme Court decision that declared the Alabama and Montgomery laws requiring segregated buses to be unconstitutional.
- A critical Supreme Court decision of this phase of the Civil Rights Movement was the 1954 Brown v.
- The NAACP proceeded with five cases challenging the school systems; these were later combined under what is known today as Brown v.