In
Carr v. Corning (1950), the
District of Columbia Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals (with Judges
Bennett Champ Clark,
Henry White Edgerton, and
E. Barrett Prettyman presiding) affirmed a ruling of the
District of Columbia U.S. District Court that upheld school segregation in the District citing seven laws passed by Congress from 1862 through 1874 that had segregated the
District of Columbia Public Schools. Under
Article I, Section VIII of the U.S. Constitution, "Congress shall have the power ... District of Columbia home rule|[t]o exercise exclusive Legislation in all Cases whatsoever, over such District ... as may, by Cession of particular States... become the Seat of the Government of the United States, and to exercise like Authority over all Places purchased by the Consent of the Legislature of the State in which the Same shall be, for ... needful buildings". On April 16, 1862, President
Abraham Lincoln signed into law the
District of Columbia Compensated Emancipation Act passed by the
37th United States Congress that ended
slavery in the District of Columbia. On May 20, 1862, Lincoln signed into law the Washington County Public Primary Schools Act which required that a special property tax be levied on all taxable property owned by non-white persons in
Washington County "for the purpose of initiating a system of education of colored children in said county". The next day, Lincoln signed the Georgetown and Washington Cities Colored Children Education Act into law that required the municipal governments of
Georgetown and
Washington City to deposit 10 percent of the property tax revenue collected from non-white property owners into separate funds to be "appropriated for the purpose of initiating a system of primary schools for the education of colored children residing in said cities" under the control of the
boards of trustees of the public schools in Georgetown and Washington City, and that the boards of trustees "shall possess all the powers, exercise the same functions, and have the same supervision over the schools provided for in this act as are now exercised by them over the public schools now existing in said cities". However, on July 11, 1862, Lincoln signed the Georgetown and Washington Cities Colored Children Schools Act into law that created a separate board of trustees for non-white schools in Georgetown and Washington City who would "possess all the powers and perform all the duties conferred upon and required of the trustees of public schools in the said cities". On June 25, 1864, Lincoln signed into law the Washington County Public Schools Act passed by the
38th United States Congress that permitted "any white resident of said county shall be privileged to place his or her child or ward, at any one of the schools provided for the education of white children in said county he or she may think proper to select … and any colored resident shall have the same rights with respect to colored schools", and repealed the special property tax on non-white property owners in Georgetown and Washington City to fund non-white schools and instead required that the municipal governments of Georgetown and Washington City to appropriate from the general funds of their schools districts funding to non-white schools proportionate to the percentage of the enrollment in the districts non-white students constituted. On July 23, 1866, President
Andrew Johnson signed into law the District of Columbia Public Schools Act passed by the
39th United States Congress that provided that the Washington County Public Schools Act be construed to "require the cities of Washington and Georgetown to pay over to the trustees of colored schools" the funding required under Section 18 of the Washington County Public Schools Act. On July 28, 1866, Johnson signed the Washington City Colored Schools Lots Donation Act into law that required the
Public Buildings Commissioner to "grant and convey to the trustees of colored schools for the cities of Washington and Georgetown … for the sole use of schools for colored children" specific
land lots in Washington City. On June 22, 1874, President
Ulysses S. Grant signed into law the
Revised Statutes of the United States Act passed by the
43rd United States Congress that provided for the revision and consolidation of all federal statutes related to the District of Columbia, that retained Section 16 of the Washington County Public Schools Act, retained a separate board of trustees for non-white schools in Georgetown and Washington City, and required the appointment of a separate superintendent for non-white schools. Beginning in late 1941, a group of parents from the
Anacostia neighborhood of Washington, D.C., calling themselves the Consolidated Parents Group, petitioned the Board of Education of the District of Columbia to open the nearly-completed
John Philip Sousa Junior High as an integrated school. The school board denied the petition and the school opened, admitting only whites. On September 11, 1950,
Gardner Bishop, Nicholas Stabile and the Consolidated Parents Group attempted to get eleven African-American students (including the case's plaintiff,
Spottswood Bolling) admitted to the school, but were refused entry by the school's principal.
James Nabrit Jr., a professor of law at
Howard University School of Law, a historically black university, filed suit in 1951 on behalf of Bolling and the other students in the District Court for the District of Columbia seeking assistance in the students' admission. After the court dismissed the claim, the case was granted a
writ of certiorari by the Supreme Court in 1952. Howard law professor
George E. C. Hayes worked with Nabrit on the oral argument for the Supreme Court hearing. While Nabrit's argument in
Bolling rested on the unconstitutionality of segregation, the much more famous
Brown v. Board of Education (decided on the same day) argued that the idea of 'separate but equal' facilities sanctioned by
Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 (1896) was a fallacy as the facilities for black students were woefully inadequate. ==Decision==