Racial #History
On this day Oct 15, 1883
Supreme Court Strikes Down Civil Rights Act, Legitimating Segregation
In 1875, Congress passed the Civil Rights Act, which forbade racial discrimination in access to public accommodations and facilities. A number of African Americans subsequently sued businesses that refused to serve Black customers.
The Supreme Court heard five of those cases in 1883, and on October 15, 1883, it struck down the Civil Rights Act of 1875 in an 8-1 decision known as the Civil Rights Cases.
The Court held that the Fourteenth Amendment, which was cited as the constitutional authorization for the Civil Rights Act of 1875 and mandates βequal protection of the laws,β did not apply to private citizens or entities.
The Supreme Courtβs decision in the Civil Rights Cases eliminated the only federal law that prohibited racial discrimination by individuals or private businesses and left African Americans who were victims of private discrimination to seek legal recourse in unsympathetic state courts. Racial discrimination in housing, restaurants, hotels, theaters, and employment became increasingly entrenched and persisted for generations.
It would be more than 80 years before Congress tried again to outlaw discrimination by passing the Civil Rights Act of 1964.