Rosa Parks Rebellion

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“It was time for someone to stand up- or in my case sit down. I refused to move.” (Bush). She rebelled when she refused to give up her seat to a white passenger on the Montgomery Bus in Montgomery, Alabama. That was when she was arrested and fined as for this incident, it started the Montgomery Bus Boycott that lasted over a year in hopes it would make life easier for colored residents to ride city buses and many more average things other people got who were privileged got to do. Rosa Parks was known mostly for being a low-key civil rights activist; her early years, causes, and rebellion made her an important part of segregation history.
Rosa Parks grew up in the segregated South and was aware of the unfair laws that fulfilled the United States. Rosa was born in Tuskegee, Alabama on February 4, 1913 and grew up in Montgomery, Alabama. Her mother was a teacher and her …show more content…

On December 1 1955 Rosa was riding the Montgomery Bus when the bus grew crowded and she was asked to give her seat up to a white passenger. Knowing she was had taken her seat right behind the white section, she didn't budge. The bus driver then called the police and she was arrested and fined.”The only tired I was, was tired of giving in”(Parks). Her nonviolent act caused a boycott that involved Martin Luther King JR. that lasted over a year hoping to change the rules. After 381 days the Supreme Court announced that the Montgomery bus law was unconstitutional (Parks). Rosa was very low-key but an important part of history today famously being known as the “mother’ of civil rights. She received some awards for standing up for the unfair rules; such as the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1996 and the Congressional Gold Medal in 1999 (Rosa). She continues to affect society by fighting for equal rights regarding someone's race on public buses and facilities and motivated other colored people to fight

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