MONTGOMERY, Ala. - Rosa Parks showed how she is a fearless woman by standing up to the authorities, a woman who stays committed and isn’t afraid to state her mind. She expresses that she’d do anything to make things constitutional and fair, and to also keep them that way through her actions. Rosa was a seamstress. This is the reason why she had to ride the bus everyday. Mrs. Parks says she sat in the section made for African Americans. James Blake, Rosa’s bus driver, commanded Parks to give up her seat to a white man. She refused to get up for the man. Parks said “ I wasn’t tired, just tired of giving in.“ By law she didn’t have to, so Rosa didn’t. Parks was arrested for violating the laws of segregation and the “Jim Crow laws“. She was also …show more content…
She was asked to go to Supreme Court on November 13th, 1956. The judge stated that Montgomery’s bus segregation laws are unconstitutional. Rosa didn’t do anything wrong, nobody thought it was fair except for the white people. Years before this, a 14 year old boy was kidnapped and killed for whistling at a white woman. Rosa says she was very devastated, and that just shows and proves how unconstitutional and unfair the African Americans were treated. Most people would say that she’d do it again. If it means saving someone or standing up for our rights, then Rosa would do it in a heartbeat. People would agree that it was the bravest thing she would ever do. The thing different about Rosa was she was educated and she was already free, unlike other colored people. She went to school at Highlander Folk School, a college for Negroes. It’s devastating to know how they were treated so unfairly, it was unexplainable. They weren’t dogs. They were people. Like any of us, it didn’t matter what they looked like. Just how they acted and what their personal character was like. Rosa is brave, loyal, intelligent, kind and so many more. Having segregation just tears all that apart. Society today is terrifying. Rosa Parks and Martin
I surely do not know the author’s thesis on civil rights, I just understand that he knows Rosa Park's thesis and view on civil rights and how she contributed to creating them. The author tells the reader how Rosa Parks was always modest about her role in the civil rights movement, giving credit to a higher power for her decision not to give up her seat. the author ends with Rosa Park quoting, “I was fortunate God provided me with the strength needed at the precise time conditions were ripe for change. I am thankful to him every day that he gave me the strength not to move.” An article in the New York Times explains that: For Rosa Parks, her decision not to give up her seat to a white man on a Montgomery Alabama, bus on Dec. 1, 1955 wasn't the first time the seamstress had chosen not to give in. They also explain how Parks had been an active member of the local NAACP chapter since 1943 and how they had marched on behalf of the Scottsboro boys, who were arrested in Alabama in 1931 for raping two white women. It goes on to say with a simple act of refusal, a move which landed Parks in prison, a motion like the Montgomery Bus Boycott who set off to start the Civil Rights Movement. They end the article by saying when the bulldogs and water hoses were unleashed a decade later, in the streets of
On December 1, 1955, Rosa Parks, one of the leaders of the local branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People [NAACP] refused to give up her seat to a white person on a segregated city bus in Montgomery, Alabama, despite being reprimanded by the driver (Schulke 166). Montgomery, Alabama was known for its terrible treatment of blacks. The buses in particular had been a source of tension between the city and black citizens for many years (Schulke, 167). As a result of refusing to give up her seat, Rosa Parks was arrested. Rosa Parks' popularity among the black community, proved to be the spark that ignited the non-violent Civil Rights Movement (Norrell 2).
Little did Rosa know that a simple act of courage would change the course of American history. That day she was arrested for violating Montgomery's transportation laws and took her to jail. She was soon released on a one-hundred dollar bail. A trial was scheduled for December 5, 1955. Her arrest brought a protest of seven thousand blacks in her community. Her community was small but every African American member of her town was sure to be protesting for her release that day. This protest rapidly started the creation of the Montgomery Improvement Association. The most involved and determined person besides Parks in this movement was Martin Luther King Jr. would call for a one-day bus boycott which ended up extending after Rosa was found guilty. Rosa was fined ten dollars. Rosa once again refused to pay any money and appealed her case. Rosa Parks and her husband both lost their jobs and were harassed and ridiculed for what happened on the bus. Most whites would say she made a fool out of herself and she embarrassed
Rosa Park was and African-American civil rights activist she refused to give up her bus seat for a white passenger on December 1,1995 .The bus driver noticed that the whites only section was full and more whites were coming on the bus the bus driver ordered that three other blacks in the next row to move to the back the two others moved to the back of the bus but Rosa Parks refused to move to the back of the bus and she got arrested after this happened Montgomery had no choice but to lift the law requiring segregation on public buses.A Officer on the scene said they asked rosa if she was tired they said her response was “I was not tired physically… No, the only tired I was, was tired of giving in.”so this show that rosa was tired of getting
“In 1955, Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a city bus to a white man in Montgomery, Alabama. This act of civil disobedience was an important catalyst in the growth of the Civil Rights movement; activists built the Montgomery Bus Boycott around it, which lasted more than a year and desegregated the buses. Civil rights protests and actions, together with legal challenges, resulted in a series of legislative and court decisions which contributed to undermining the Jim Crow
Rosa Parks was a middle aged woman, in her low forties. A little after 5 pm, on a cool Alabama evening, sixty years ago, Rosa Parks was sitting in the first row of the “Blacks” section. There she was confronted by the Montgomery Bus driver (Black) to move out of her seat so some “White” folk could sit there. Upon seeing nothing wrong with her sitting in the “Blacks” section Rosa Parks declined the order to get up and move. When she did not get up the bus driver called the cops and had her arrested. Her boss then later bailed her out, and her boss turned out to be the leader of the NAACP or the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. So because of this whole little situation with the Montgomery Bus, it all lead to a bigger
Even though Rosa Parks stood up for her rights she still suffered after the arrest. She lost her department store job and her husband was fired because he talked about Rosa’s legal case to his boss. They had to leave Montgomery because they could not find any other jobs, no one would hire her. They ended up moving to Detroit Michigan and she found a job as a secretary and receptionist in U.S. Representative John Conyers congressional office. She also started to serve on the board of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America.
Rosa was against segregation when she left for Tennessee but coming back she was just done with it. She decided she didn't want her family's life controlled by Jim Crow's laws or even her family's family controlled. So she decided she was going to do
Rosa had already dealt with segregation and other issues between the black and white communities. She was undoubtedly ready for this fight long before it came to her. Rosa Parks should always be remembered for this particular event because she persisted regardless of what others thought of her. This is just one act that makes Ms. Parks a
On Thursday evening December 1, 1955, Rosa boards a Montgomery City Bus to go home after a long day working as a seamstress. She walks back to the section for blacks, and takes a seat. The law stated that they could sit there if no White people were standing. Rosa parks never liked segregation rules and has been fighting against them for more than ten years in the NAACP, but until then had never broke any of the unjust rules. As the bus stops at more places, more white people enter the bus, all the seats in the “White Only” section was filled and the bus driver orders Rosa’s row to move to the back of the bus, they all moved, accept Rosa. She was arrested and fined for violating a city regulation. This act of defiance began a movement that ended legal Segregation in America, and made her an inspiration to freedom devoted people everywhere.
Throughout the African American civil rights movement opportunities were sought to spark a chance at improving conditions in the south. Rosa Parks refusing to give up her seat on the Montgomery, Alabama bus was the fire to that spark. Rosa, standing up for herself something anyone person in today’s world would do, was arrested and put in jail. While Rosa was in jail she caught the eye of many people in the Civil Rights Movement, including the leaders. The Civil Rights leaders protested her arrest and hired lawyers to aid her in her trial. Although she was found guilty and was fined fourteen dollars for the cost of the court case, which lasted on thirty minutes, she wasn’t done yet. Rosa Parks has affected the society we live in today in
Martin Luther King Jr. is an idol for most people; Rosa Parks was one of them. She admired his bold integrity to stand up for what is right in equality. Dr. King was a light to the world, because people wanted things to change, but they were afraid. They did not want to be arrested or attacked. They could boycott. They could refuse to ride the buses. That would cost the city a lot of money. The city and bus officials would not like that. This was a way Dr. King was standing up for Rosa. I added Dr. King to Rosa’s friends, because I felt he made a great impact on her life. If it weren’t for Martin Luther King’s heroic act in taking charge of the situation, Rosa Parks may have been in jail longer than intended, with a possible worse penalty.
She just wanted to catch the bus home, which led to a universal conflict. She was an older lady who set on the front of the bus; however, a white lady got on the bus and she needed a seat so the bus driver told Rosa Park to get out her seat and give it to the white lady Rosa was not going to give her seat up and that transition to her being excused off the bus by police and she went to prison. That was a major impact. However did you know that there was another young lady on the bus who did not give her seat before Rosa Park, but nine months before Parks’ historic action, a 15-year-old teenager named Claudette Colvin had the same incident; she was arrested then serviced by the U.S. Supreme Court’s order for the desegregation of Alabama’s bus system.
On December 1, 1955 a black seamstress, after a long and exhausting day at work, got onto a public bus in Montgomery, Alabama and sat in the back where the blacks were portioned off. A few stops following, a flock of white people boarded. They seized all the remaining seats in the front, except for one white man who was forced to stand as the seats were filled up. The bus driver ordered the four black people in the rear end of the bus to give up their seats to the white man.Three of the four stood up hesitantly. Rosa Parks, the work-weary black seamstress did not. She was arrested later that evening. She was angry at the hate and disrespect towards blacks and minorities. She had enough of the way the world has treated them and she knew that
Rosa Parks was a wonderful who refused to give up her seat to a white passenger ,spurring the Montgomery boycott and other effects to end segregation. For example “and the walls came tumbling down”(Mary 6). This show that everything that she did by saying “NO” came back at her and caused her to suffer and end up in jail. Rosa Parks was bailed out of jail 24 hours after her arrest by Edgar Nixon , president of the NAACP ( National Association For The Advancement