Documenting United States History

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450 ChApTEr 20 | the BreaKDoWn oF ConsensUs | period eight 19 45 –198 0

document 20.1 DwigHT D. eiSenHower, on earl warren
and the Brown Decision
1954

President Dwight D. Eisenhower (1890–1969) appointed former governor of California
Earl Warren (1891–1974) to the United States Supreme Court in 1953. In May of the fol-
lowing year, Warren delivered the landmark Brown v. Board of Education decision, in
which the justices unanimously overturned the Court’s decision in Plessy v. Ferguson
(1896) and declared that separate educational facilities were “inherently unequal.” In the
following excerpt from a letter written in October 1954, Eisenhower defends his appoint-
ment of Warren.

... The Chief Justice has a great many administrative tasks, as well as obvious
responsibilities involving personal leadership. Along with this, he must be a
statesman and, in my opinion (since I have my share of egotism), I could not do
my duty unless I appointed a man whose philosophy of government was some-
what along the lines of my own. All this finally brought me down to Warren,
especially as I refused to appoint anyone to the Supreme Court who was over
62 years of age. It seems to me completely futile to try to use a Supreme Court
vacancy as a mere reward for long and brilliant service. If I should be succeeded
by a New Deal President, a judge who is now 69 or 70 would probably create a
vacancy very soon to be filled by the left-wingers. So—it seems to me that pru-
dence demands that I secure relatively young men for any vacancies that may
occur. I wish that I could find a number of outstanding jurists in the low 50’s.
The segregation issue will, I think, become acute or tend to die out according
to the character of the procedure orders that the Court will probably issue this
winter. My own guess is that they will be very moderate and accord a maximum
of initiative to local courts.


“Letter from President Dwight D. Eisenhower to E. E. ‘Swede’ Hazlett, October 23, 1954,”
Dwight D. Eisenhower Library, http://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/brown-v-board.

The Beginnings of the


Modern civil rights Movement


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