Home / Full timeline / Homer Adolf Plessy, who was seven-eighths White and one-eighth African, is arrested for refusing to move to the designated Black section of a train. This incident leads to the Plessy v. Ferguson trial.
Homer Adolf Plessy, who was seven-eighths White and one-eighth African, is arrested for refusing to move to the designated Black section of a train. This incident leads to the Plessy v. Ferguson trial.
1892 (Jun 7)
Homer Adolf Plessy purchased a first-class ticket from New Orleans to Covington on the East Louisiana railway. Plessy, who is believed to have been a carpenter born in New Orleans, was seven-eighths Caucasian and one-eighth African. He boarded the train and took a seat in the coach reserved for Whites. When the conductor ordered him to move to the coach reserved for Blacks, Plessy refused. An officer removed Plessy from the train and took him to the parish jail of New Orleans where he was charged with criminally violating an 1890 Louisiana statute that required separate accommodations for Blacks and whites. In Plessy v. Ferguson, Plessy petitioned the Louisiana state Supreme Court for a writ of prohibition and certiorari against John H. Ferguson, judge of the criminal district court for the Parish of Orleans, and he asked the higher courts to prohibit Ferguson from holding the trial. The Louisiana Supreme Court denied Plessy's requests on grounds that the law was constitutional, but his writ of error was passed on to the U.S. Supreme Court.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.