Career
Board of Education. The Court ruled in favor of Brown. This decision overturned the separate but equal doctrine that had been used as the standard in Civil Rights lawsuits since the Plessy v. Ferguson case in 1896, in effect declaring it unconstitutional to have separate public schools for black and white students.
The decision is considered a major milestone in the United States. Civil Rights Movement.
Brown was a welder in the shops of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway, an assistant pastor at Saint Mark"s A.M.E Church. Brown"s daughter Linda, a third grader, had to walk six blocks to her school bus stop to ride to Monroe Elementary, her segregated black school one mile (16 km) away, while Sumner Elementary, a white school, was seven blocks from her house.
Brown died of a heat stroke in Springfield, Missouri, in 1961. 1988, the nonprofit Brown Foundation for Educational Equity, Excellence and Research was founded by Topeka community members to honor Oliver Brown and to preserve the legacy of the Civil Rights Movement.
On October 26, 1992, after two years of work by the Brown Foundation, President George H. West. Bush signed the Brown v.
The Board of Education National Historic Site Acting, establishing the former Monroe Elementary School as a national park.