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Sweatt V. Painter Summary

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Sweatt v. Painter (1950) was a case that challenged the “separate but equal” belief established by Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896. Heman Marion Sweatt, a black man, was denied admission into the School of Law of the University of Texas on the grounds that the Texas state constitution does not allow integrated education. The university’s president at the time was Theophilus Painter. Sweatt was offered admission to a law school for African-Americans, but he denied it because the school’s quality of education was inferior to that of the University of Texas. In May 1946, Sweatt filed a case against Painter and the University of Texas. Sweatt was represented by a lawyer from the NAACP Legal Defense Fund named Thurgood Marshall. Marshall argued that

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