The Clarendon County case, which came on for trial before a three-judge Federal court in Charleston May 28-29, 1951, provided the pattern. The pleadings were drafted by Marshall himself and by Robert L. Carter of New York, the two top lawyers for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. (In 1961, Marshall became a Federal circuit judge.)

The facts were not in great dispute. At that time, there were in Clarendon County as a whole 6500 Negro children and 2375 white children. District 22 had 684 Negro elementary pupils and 150 Negro high school pupils, plus 102 white elementary pupils and 34 white high school pupils. The Negro pupils of District 22 went to three schoolhouses: Scott Branch (a combined elementary and high school), Liberty Hill, and Rambay. All the white pupils went to the Summerton elementary and high school. It was shown that the facilities for white children, though old (the Summerton high school was built in 1907), were in many respects far superior to the facilities for the Negro children. The two-room Rambay School and the four-room Liberty Hill School had no running water, and Rambay had no electric power. The Negro schools had few of the educational aids provided at Summerton; their playgrounds were inferior; toilet facilities at the two smaller buildings were outside privies. County officials pointed out that neither water nor sewage lines existed in the area of the two schools; in the remote rural section served by Rambay, no electric power was available to anyone; the library for colored pupils at Scott Branch, they said, was superior to the library for white pupils at Summerton; and they denied any discrimination in transportation, janitorial services, and other amenities. As the case went to trial, however, counsel for Clarendon County confessed a general inequality in physical facilities, described a State-wide plan instituted by Governor Byrnes for school improvements, and pledged a prompt effort to achieve equality.

By far the most significant evidence in the Clarendon County case came from a group of witnesses summoned by the plaintiffs to testify on the psychological effects of segregation itself. Kenneth Clark, assistant professor of psychology at the New York City College, was a key figure in this phase of the NAACP’s assault. In the Teachers’ College Record for October 1960, he revealingly describes the fashion in which he was approached by Carter in February 1951, on behalf of the NAACP’s Legal Defense Fund, to prepare exhibits and test findings that would support the plaintiffs’ side in the School Segregation Cases. Carter wanted material that would show how “segregation inflicts psychological damage on its victims,” and Clark collaborated with the lawyers in preparing psychological data “to be used in whatever ways they believed most effective in the presentation of their case.” As part of the plan, Clark himself went to Clarendon County, and administered the “doll test” to twenty-six Negro children; in this test, the subjects are shown two dolls identical except for skin coloring—one doll is white, the other brown. They then are asked which doll they like best, which doll is “nice,” which doll is “bad,” and which doll “is like you?” From the answers to these questions, Clark testified in the Clarendon case, “we get some picture of the child’s concept of his own color, and we also get an indication of the child’s anxieties and confusions about his color and his feelings.” Not surprisingly, the twenty-six pupils Clark tested in Clarendon County were found to have been “definitely harmed in the development of their personalities.”

Other witnesses for the plaintiffs included Harold McNalley, associate professor of education at Columbia Teachers College; Ellis O. Knox, professor of education at Howard University; James L. Hupp, professor of education and psychology at Wesleyan College of West Virginia; David Krech, professor of social psychology at Harvard; and Mrs. Helen Trager, a lecturer in psychology at Vassar. Their testimony, admitted over defense objections that it was irrelevant and immaterial, was intended to support the plaintiffs’ primary contention that segregation, in and of itself, caused emotional damage to the Negro child, and that segregated schools could never be made “equal” as a matter of law.

On June 23, 1951, the Fourth Circuit’s Chief Judge John J. Parker, joined by District Judge George Bell Timmerman, handed down an opinion in the Clarendon County case. The third member of the court, District Judge J. Waties Waring, strongly dissented to the Parker-Timmerman decision. The majority decree directed county officials to proceed at once with genuine equalization of public school facilities, but the court refused to upset the long-standing doctrine of “separate but equal.” The late Judge Parker was one of the nation’s most widely admired jurists, a North Carolinian who had then had more than twenty-five years’ experience on the bench. His opinion (98 F. Supp. 529), though it subsequently was to be reversed, merits respectful consideration in any study of the South’s position.

On the key question developed by the plaintiffs—that segregation in itself is a denial of equal protection—Parker took a calmly judicial approach: This is a “matter of legislative policy for the several States,” he said, “with which the Federal courts are powerless to interfere.” He continued:

One of the great virtues of our constitutional system is that, while the Federal government protects the fundamental rights of the individual, it leaves to the several States the solution of local problems. In a country with a great expanse of territory, with peoples of widely differing customs and ideas, local self government in local matters is essential to the peace and happiness of the people in the several communities as well as to the strength and unity of the country as a whole. It is universally held, therefore, that each State shall determine for itself, subject to the observance of the fundamental rights and liberties guaranteed by the Federal Constitution, how it shall exercise the police power, i.e., the power to legislate with respect to the safety, morals, health and general welfare. And in no field is this right of the several States more clearly recognized than in that of public education.

Judge Parker quoted from an opinion by the District of Columbia’s Judge E. B. Prettyman, an outstanding jurist who had considered the question a year earlier in Carr v. Corning (182 F.2d 14). There Judge Prettyman raised the question of whether the Fourteenth Amendment had lifted the entire problem of race relations out of the hands of all legislatures and settled it. “We do not think it did,” he said. “Such problems lie naturally in the field of legislation, a method susceptible of experimentation, of development, of adjustment to the current necessities in a variety of community circumstance. We do not believe that the makers of the first ten amendments in 1789 or of the Fourteenth Amendment in 1866 meant to foreclose legislative treatment of the problem in this country. This is not to decry efforts to reach that state of common existence which is the obvious highest good in our concept of civilization. It is merely to say that the social and economic inter-relationship of two races living together is a legislative problem, as yet not solved, and is not a problem solved fully, finally or unequivocally by a fiat enacted many years ago. We must remember that on this particular point we are interpreting a Constitution and not enacting a statute.”

Judge Parker went on in his own opinion to review decisions of the Supreme Court sustaining the separate-but-equal doctrine, and to distinguish between education at the graduate-school level and education at the elementary-school level. In dealing with the grammar schools, under systems of compulsory attendance, local lawmakers have problems of educational policy that must take into account not only questions of instruction “but also of the wishes of the parent as to the upbringing of the child and his associates in the formative period of childhood and adolescence.” If public education is to have the support of the people through their legislatures, Judge Parker said, “it must not go contrary to what they deem for the best interests of their children.” The plaintiffs’ expert witnesses had testified that mixed schools would benefit children of both races by exposing them to democratic opportunities in community living. Defense witnesses, on the other hand, had testified that mixed schools would result in friction and tension. Said the court:

The questions thus presented are not questions of constitutional right but of legislative policy, which must be formulated, not in vacuo or with doctrinaire disregard of existing conditions, but in realistic approach to the situations to which it is to be applied.... The Federal courts would be going far outside their constitutional function were they to attempt to prescribe educational policies for the States in such matters, however desirable such policies might be in the opinion of some sociologists or educators. For the Federal courts to do so would result, not only in interference with local affairs by an agency of the Federal government, but also in the substitution of the judicial for the legislative process in what is essentially a legislative matter.