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How Did Rosa Parks Contribute To The Civil Rights Movement

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The Civil rights movement is one in history that many people remember. Whether for the mass amounts of change or for the brave souls that made it happen, the movement is a famous time in history. One of which is known as Rosa Parks. Her name is widely known throughout the world for her unwillingness to give up her seat for a white man, however, that is only a minuscule aspect of her story. Yes, her actions indeed led to the Montgomery bus boycott, but her contributions to the Civil rights movement didn't stop there. Because of these things, Parks is regarded as the mother of the civil rights movement. Rosa Parks helped to initiate the civil rights movement. Although many people, both minority groups and women, had been fighting for equality …show more content…

So much so, that it was not the first time an event like that took place in her life. Almost the exact event occurred nearly 12 years before the boycott. Black passengers of the bus were supposed to enter through the front door and pay for their ticket, then exit the bus and reenter through the back door, to then sit in the designated black seating. Parks refused to exit and reenter, getting herself kicked off the bus. What makes this so interesting though, was that the bus driver was the same person. James blake would additionally have another altercation with Rosa Parks on his bus nearly 12 years later in the monitory bus boycott. The story is almost identical. 42-year-old Rosa was returning home from a long day of work and entered the public bus. This time she sat in the first row of the designated black seating of the bus. It happened that the white section was filled up, as another man entered the bus. As he found that there was no more room for him, he asked the black people sitting in the first row of the black section to move, making a mother row for whites. Everyone in that first row agreed but one; Rosa Parks. With her refusal, James Blake, the driver, got involved. It was the law that she sat there, but only custom that the bus driver could tell her to move. However, she stood her ground, which resulted in her arrest. Although she was bailed out later that night, she had had enough. In addition, the event began to gain public attention, leading to the Montgomery bus boycott of 1955, led by Martin Luther King

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