"The montgomery bus boycott and the women who started it" Essays and Research Papers

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    lives as if nothing went on. However‚ there were some people who were against the discrimination of African-Americans and started movements to take a stand and fight for desegregation. One of the most historic movements during the Civil Rights Era that led to the desegregation of buses and other public transportation was the Montgomery Bus Boycott. Even with little to no freedom in southern states African-Americans involved in the boycott were able come together and make history using what little power

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    Rosa Parks and the Montgomery Bus Boycott Since the earliest of times African Americans have been denied their rights. Finally when having enough of this discrimination they started a movement in 1955 that would soon be called the civil rights movement. This was initially triggered by the death of a young African American boy at the age of fourteen named Emmett Till. All of which would initiate a new era in the American quest for freedom and equality of all people. Starting with Rosa Parks and

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    things‚ but one was the Montgomery Bus Boycott Martin Luther King Jr. did many praiseworthy things in his life that have abundantly affected the world‚ such as became the founder of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) in 1957. In February 1960 the SCLC

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    people of the United States show that King is a courageous and skillful leader. Throughout his lifetime Martin Luther King Jr. staged many movements to gain rights for the black community of America. One of these campaigns was the Montgomery Bus Boycott. The boycott started

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    timeline of the events which lead up to the boycott‚ were part of the boycott‚ and followed the boycott: 1954: May 21 - Professor Jo Ann Robinson writes a warning to the mayor of Montgomery of the possibility of a bus boycott. September 1 - Martin Luther King Jr. becomes the pastor of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery. 1955: March 2 - Claudette Colvin‚ a fifteen year old African American‚ is arrested for violating the bus segregation laws. October 21 - Mary Louise

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    Even more so than the Bus Boycott‚ the members of this movement were very diverse‚ consisting of “young students‚ movement veterans‚ blacks and whites‚ men and women‚ northerners and southerners‚ and religious and secular activists.” They “did not possess a coherent identity‚ rather they were unified in their desired ends” (Luthi‚ 386). The movement relied upon the diversity of the members. The methods of the movement were to send buses full of both black and white people down into the south in a

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    History 19 April 2024 How the Montgomery Bus Boycott Sparked the Civil Rights Movement “One person can change the world” (Rosa Parks). Needing transportation‚ civilians of different races rode on the same bus to get to and from work. Segregation caused African Americans to be forced to the back of the bus‚ while whites got to enjoy the luxury of sitting in the front. This continued until an African American woman‚ Rosa Parks‚ refused to give up her seat at the front of the bus. The police later arrested

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    the following in the civil rights movement 2. The bus boycott The events and outcomes of the bus boycott are significant in assistance to the civil rights movement. It was the introduction of direct action and non violence‚ the beginning of Martin Luther’s campaign in the movement and the achievements. The boycott began on the 1st December 1955 with Rosa Parks in Montgomery‚ Alabama‚ with Rosa Parks. She refused to give up her seat on a bus to a white man on demand. She was arrested and imprisoned

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    In Martin Luther King Junior’s “Speech Ending the Montgomery Bus Boycott”‚ he describes the actions and protest that the citizens of Montgomery participated to create the Montgomery Bus Boycott. The boycott began when Rosa Parks sat in the front of a bus after a long day of work and was ordered to yield her seat to a white citizen. She respectfully refused and was then arrested do to the unjust laws about segregation on public transportation. In response to her arrest‚ citizens of the black community

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    Bus Boycott This year the event I have studied was the Bus Boycott in American‚ Montgomery‚ in 1955. The causes of the bus boycott are the racial discrimination that the African American community had been shown and also Rosa Parks protest and arrest. The consequences of the Bus Boycott is the involvement and the impact of the Supreme Court’s decision of desegregating all of America ‚ and also another consequence that is important to the event is the grand boost in the Civil Rights movement campaign

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