ABSTRACT

This article, a reconsidering of both the benefits and the consequences of the Brown v. Board of Education (1954; Davis & Graham, 1995) case, posits determinations as to the historical significance of the U.S. Supreme Court justices’ decision. Carefully weighing the words of the justices renders a position that the decision of the Court and the intention of the Court do not fall in alignment with one another. And despite the rightness of the decision and all that has been reaped in the way of its benefits, still, the decision’s unarticulated language has rendered a greater significance and has placed enduring consequences on the public education system, as well as in the greater context of race as a whole.