What Role Did Rosa Parks Play In The Civil Rights Movement

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The Rosa Parks Movement Born Rosa Louise McCauley on February 4, 1913 in Tuskegee, Alabama. The “First Lady of Civil Rights” grew up being racially discriminated, and had many experiences with activism for racial equality. Her parents separated when she was young, and she was forced to live with her grandparents who were former slaves. She was inspired at a young age by her grandparents who were advocates for racial equality. When she was younger, Rosa can remember an encounter she had with the Ku Klux Klan marching down the street as her grandfather held his shotgun and stood in front of their house. Rosa started her education early, as she was fortunate enough to be taught how to read at a young age unlike most African American children …show more content…

Her actions, which led to her arrest, sparked a movement in our nation; and that movement is still going on today. I believe that Rosa Parks had a major role in the kick start of the Civil Rights Movement. Rosa Parks’ arrest caused many boycotts and protests because African Americans were tired of being second to White Americans. African Americans just wanted justice and equality for their race, and I feel as though today we are still fighting for that equality.
On December 1, 1955, Rosa Parks would not give up her seat to a white man on a segregated bus in Montgomery, AL. This act defied the southern custom that blacks had to give up their seats toward the front of the bus to whites. As a result, Parks was put in jail for her act of defiance and this is also what caused the Civil Rights Movement. African Americans were …show more content…

The Supreme Court had ordered Montgomery to integrate its public bus system, and then Martin Luther King had emerged as the leader of the Civil Rights Movement. Rosa Parks became a Civil Rights activist alongside Martin Luther King. Martin Luther King established the Montgomery Improvement Association (MIA) after boycotters chose him to be the main leader of this movement. On November 13, 1956, public buses were officially integrated after the NAACP won the court case against the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court realized that the segregation of buses was a violation of the Fourteenth