Governor pardons Plessy, of ‘separate but equal’ ruling
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Louisiana’s governor on Wednesday posthumously pardoned Homer Plessy, the Black man whose arrest for refusing to leave a whites-only railroad car in 1892 to protest racial segregation sparked the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that cemented “separate but equal” into law for half a century.
The state Board of Pardons in November recommended the pardon for Plessy, who boarded the rail car as a member of a small civil rights group hoping to overturn a state law segregating trains. Instead, the protest led to the 1896 ruling known as Plessy v. Ferguson, solidifying whites-only spaces in public accommodations such as transportation, hotels and schools for decades.
Gov. John Bel Edwards held the pardon ceremony near the spot near where Plessy was arrested.
The purpose “is not to erase what happened 125 years ago but to acknowledge the wrong that was done,” Phoebe Ferguson, the great-great-granddaughter of the county judge who imposed Plessy’s punishment, said during the ceremony.