Summary
Barnette involved a West Virginia state law that compelled students in public schools to salute the American flag as part of the school’s activities. The law was enacted just after America entered World War II. It was in that context that the Supreme Court decided this famous First Amendment case and addressed whether Jehovah’s Witnesses, who had religious scruples against saluting the flag, could nevertheless be compelled to do so. The Barnette children—Marie and Gathie, eight and eleven years old—were Jehovah’s Witnesses instructed by their parents to not salute the flag or say the pledge and were expelled from school for following their parents’ instructions.