The Montgomery Bus Boycott was sparked by the arrest of Rosa Parks. It was a 13-month protest that ended with the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that segregation is prohibited. The Montgomery Bus Boycott was a seminal event in the Civil Rights Movement. The Boycott ended with the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that segregation on public buses is unconstitutional, but it was a long process and this is how it all happened.
When the boycott started the buses were empty for months since most of the riders were African Americans, the buses weren’t making any money. It all ended with Rosa Parks starting it. “A black women helped change American history.” She refused to give up her seat to a white man and she was arrested. After her arrest, black leaders, church ministers and Martin Luther King Jr., who was the leader of the group, called for the bus boycott. The boycott was meant for blacks refusing to ride the busses. The busses have been empty for months since the majority of the bus riders were African American. Soon whites started in on the protest as well. African Americans had to make a stand, they knew if
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It showed the community that they will go through whatever they need to in order to have equality. Robinson reminds the mayor that three-fourths of the bus riders are African Americans because if the majority of the people riding the bus are African Americans they should be able to have equal rights since they are the majority when it comes to that. Then African Americans stopped riding the bus, they had black taxi drives drive them. Soon police saw that and harassed and arrested them for helping them get to work. They found different ways to get their jobs, they organized a carpool, but also through hitch-hiking, walking, and transportation of servants by white housewives. If African Americans want something to be done, they will find a way and go through what they need to for it to be