The Montgomery Bus Boycott: Rosa Parks And The Civil Rights Movement

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The Montgomery Bus Boycott It only takes one person to make a change, but with the help and support from others together they can start a movement. In the early 20th century segregation was extremely popular. Laws like the Jim Crow Laws and the “separate but equal” doctrine resulted in a segregated society between blacks and whites in both the Northern states and the Sothern states. For example most public places and businesses were either for whites only or had and separate section for colored people, even public transportation had a designated white sections and separate colored sections. Fifty years after the initial segregation laws were passed, transportation and most public places where still segregated. African Americans were still…show more content…
In 1955, it was Rosa Parks whose display of civil disobedience inspired a boycott that protested segregated seating in Montgomery, Alabama called the Montgomery Bus Boycott. Rosa Parks became an icon for anybody who was too nervous to stick up for their rights because of unfair laws that stood in the way of their equality. The Montgomery Bus Boycott shows how a single act of defiance can unite people to fight against the injustices of segregation that were forced upon them, and against all odds together they kept fighting until they succeeded. Sometimes all it takes is a demonstration of someone’s bravery to give people the encouragement they need to come together and take a stand. On December 1, 1995 42 year old Rosa Parks got on a Montgomery bus on her way home from work, and before she even reached home she set off social revolution. When the bus driver instructed…show more content…
To protest her arrest and segregated seating, African Americans refused to ride city buses in Montgomery, Alabama. The boycott lasted for 381 days, and is regarded as the first large-scale demonstration against segregation in the U.S. People in the community and other fellow boycotters helped out African Americans during the boycott. The MIA created a system of car pools, using privet cars and volunteer drivers to give as many as 2000 rides a day, to provide the boycotters transportation. The boycott wasn’t easy, they had to walk almost everywhere which was extremely tiring and difficult. They also had to put up with negative reactions from people who did not support the cause. Police would harass people participating in car polls with traffic tickets and arrests. People went as for to explode bombs in the homes of Dr. King and E.D. Nixon. In order to provide support during these hard times mass meetings were held in the Montgomery’s African American churches to boost morale by, singing, and praying. After eleven hard months the Supreme Court outlaws segregation and declares segregation unconstitutional on November 13, 1956. The success of the Montgomery Bus Boycott inspired new movements for African American civil
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