Rosa Parks: The Rise Of The Civil Rights Movement

1307 Words3 Pages

Civil Rights Movement The Civil Rights Movement is a period during 1954-1968 when African Americans fought for equality and to end racial segregation, which is dividing the whites from the colored, in America through protests, strikes, and marches. Many great and inspirational leaders rose from this movement and helped African Americans be heard. The Civil Rights movement resulted in many court cases, Acts, and ratifications of Amendments that helped African Americans attempt to reach their end goal, which was to live in a country that every person was equal, no matter their race. The court cases, Acts, and the ratification of Amendments surly did help them reach the goal but they still had obstacles that they had to face. Before 1954, …show more content…

On December 1, 1955, Rosa Parks decided to sit in the front of the bus after a long day of work. A white passenger demanded her to move, during this time African Americans had to sit on the back of the bus or had to stand. She strongly believed that she did not have to give her seat away to a white passenger. She was later arrested for breaking the law, for not giving her seat up. Her being arrested opened the eyes and provoked a boycott. A boycott is when one avoids doing something or someone as a protest. The boycott was against the Montgomery bus system, which meant they stopped taking the Montgomery bus system for transportation, and it lasted 381 …show more content…

Over 200,00 people participated in this march, which happens to be one of the biggest rallies in America, every single one of them fighting for the same goal, freedom, jobs, and equality. Many groups and organizations came together to make this revolutionary occasion happen and get America to open their eyes to what African American’s had to go through. One of the biggest leaders during the Civil Rights Movement was Martin Luther King Jr., he probably made one of the most famous speeches during this Movement, his “I have a dream” speech. His inspirational speech was about how King dreams about a day where we can live in a country that race will no longer be something people look at and where they can all be equal and not be judged by their color but by their personality. In his speech, Martin Luther King Jr. states, “I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their

Open Document