https://www.northernhighlands.org/cms/lib/NJ01000179/Centricity/Domain/91/ap%20us%20history/74_75_brown_v_boe.pdf
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Explanation:
On what basis did Herman Talmadge attack the Supreme Court's decision
GOVERNOR HERMAN TALMADGE'S STATEMENT
ON THE BROWN DECISION (1954)
Beginning in the mid-1930s, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People (NAACP) began to challenge school segregation in the hopes of ending the Jim
Crow laws of the South. Its efforts culminated in the unanimous Supreme Court decision,
Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas (1954), which ended the "separate but
equal" doctrine of racial segregation in public schools. Positive and negative responses to
this decision were immediate. Georgia Governor Herman E. Talmadge, Jr., was among
the first Southern politicians to issue a public statement, which came the day after the
Brown decision. Talmadge had deep political roots in Georgia: His father was elected
governor three times, and Talmadge filled the remainder of his father's last term and then
was elected governor. Talmadge was proud that he spent more on public education for
blacks and whites in his six years as governor than in all previous administrations
combined. In 1956, he was elected to the Senate and became a prominent opponent of
the Civil Rights Act of 1957. His Brown decision statement, offered -next, reflected the
sentiments of many whites in the Deep South.