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Rosa Parks Research Paper

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Is it possible for one person to change the world they live in? Rosa Parks was an influential women of the Civil Rights Movement, playing a huge role in the Montgomery Bus Boycott and fighting for desegregation. Her bravery and dedication set the foundation of the society we know today. Rosa Parks was born in Tuskegee Alabama, on February 4th, 1913. At a young age, her parents separated and she and her mother moved to Montgomery, Alabama. Her mother valued education, so she attended an all black high school at age eleven. Her education was cut short when she left high school to take care of her dying grandmother, and shortly after very ill mother. At nineteen, Rosa married Raymond Parks who was a long time member of the National …show more content…

Soon after, the driver reported her refusal to the police and she was placed under arrest for violating the city code.
Word of her arrest spread quickly, and E.D. Nixon, head of the NAACP, was already organizing the idea of a boycott. This boycott was known as the Montgomery Bus Boycott and took place on December 5, 1955. This date was chosen on the day of Rosa’s trial as a form of protest. During this boycott, all negroes agreed to not riding the bus, even if that meant walking many miles to school or work. The negro community felt that Rosa Parks’ bravery was the perfect opportunity to put an end to segregation, and to make real changes.
Rosa Parks was trialed on December 5, 1955, and found guilty of violating segregation laws. As loyalty grew stronger to the participation in the boycott, E.D Nixon created the Montgomery Improvement Association, and Martin Luther King Jr, was elected as its president. Under the leadership of Martin Luther King Jr., the boycott remained successful, and set a pattern of nonviolent protest. But, unfortunately, with the successful progress of the boycott, came violence from the white community. In the midst of this violence, black churches were destroyed, and homes were bomb. This, however, did not stop the determined boycotters. As more attention was drawn by the press, the case regarding racial segregation was brought to the Supreme Court, and on November 13, 1956 the court ruled that it was unconstitutional to maintain bus segregation. The Montgomery Bus Boycott officially ended on December 20,

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