Letter, South Carolina Governor James Byrnes to President Dwight D. Eisenhower Regarding School Segregation
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OCR Page 1 of 2ne WHITE HOUSH
Nov 21 Il 14 AM '53
RECEIVED
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
ALEX MCCULLOUGH
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
JAMES F BYRNES
MISS CASSIE CONNOR
COLUMBIA
GOVERNOR
SECRETARY
November 20, 1953
Personal
The President
AIR MAIL
The White House
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. President:
The press quoted you as saying at your press conference Wednesday
that you intended to personally consider the reply your Administration
will make to the questions propounded by the Supreme Court in the
school segregation cases. Because of this I have clipped from the
first draft of a brief which has been prepared by Mr. John W. Davis x
representing certain school trustees in South Carolina, several
pages which I herewith enclose.
-
stained try
the AG
In the brief our counsel will argue that the United States
Supreme Court and every other court, federal and state, that has
ever considered this question has held that the 14th Amendment did
not prohibit a state from enacting a law requiring separation of
races in public schools provided equal facilities were furnished
all students. The question now is whether you will ask the Supreme
Court to reverse its decisions and declare that the 14th Amendment
now means something the Court has heretofore said it did not mean.
The Court has no right to legislate. That is the duty of the
legislative branches of the federal and state governments. The
excerpts I enclose you contain a discussion of the right of a state
in the exercise of its police powers to make distinctions between
people, provided such distinctions are not arbitrary and unreasonable.
I hope your consideration will cause you to conclude that this is the
proper position for you to take. There are five cases pending. The
Court might well conclude the conditions in Kansas were such that a
law making a distinction between the races was unreasonable. The
Court might say that in the South Carolina case where the number of
colored students in the school district in questions is ten to every
one white student, the Court cannot say that the action of the state
is manifestly unreasonable.
This position would be in accord with the decisions of the courts
and certainly it would be in accord with the position you have con-
sistently taken, that the states should have the right to control
matters that are purely local.
With best wishes to you, I am
Sincerel
ga
yours
JFB:eh
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