The
Village of Scarsdale (coextensive with the Town of Scarsdale) in
Westchester County, New York had permitted since 1957 the annual display of
creches sponsored by the Scarsdale Creche Committee, a private organization, in Boniface Circle, a small public park in the central business district, for about two weeks during the
Christmas season. However, in 1981, the Village Board of Trustees began barring the placement of nativity scenes in the park due to increasing opposition from residents, fifty percent of whom were
Jewish, who deemed it "unneighborly" and "insensitive." In 1983, the Creche Committee along with a group of twelve residents (one of whom is resident Kathleen McCreary), referred to as the Citizens' Group, brought a suit against the Scarsdale Board of Trustees in the
U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, arguing that the Board's withdrawal of permission to display the nativity scene in the park was a violation of the First Amendment's protection of
free speech and
free exercise of religion. Judge
Charles E. Stewart, Jr. ruled on December 8, 1983, in the case of
McCreary v. Stone that the display of the nativity scene did, indeed, constitute an impermissible
establishment of religion, stating that
when a symbol is left on public land, the land becomes the message-bearer. The decision was appealed and argued before the
United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in June 1984. The appeals court affirmed the district court's determination that the Village's denial of the display of the nativity scene was content-based (meaning the denial was based on the religious nature of the display) as well as its findings of fact. However, the court of appeals disagreed with the district court's analysis of
Widmar v. Vincent (on which its decision was partially based) in light of
Lynch v. Donnelly (which came only one month after the district court's ruling) saying "an equal-access policy would not contravene the establishment clause." The court of appeals reversed the decision and
remanded the case. The Scarsdale Board interpreted the court of appeals' decision to mean it was compelled to display the nativity scene on public land. The board of trustees voted unanimously to appeal the decision to the Supreme Court. == Issue ==