Rosa Parks stood up for African Americansby sitting down.
AlthoughnAbraham Lincolns 1863 Emancipation Proclamation granted slaves their freedom, for many years Black people were discriminated against in much of the United States. In southern states, for instance, most Black children were forced to attend separate schools from white kids in classrooms that were often rundown, with outdated books. African Americans also couldnt eat at the same restaurants as white people and had to sit in the back seats of public buses. Segregationthe separation of raceswas enforced by local laws.
Rosa Parks was born on February 4, 1913. On December 1, 1955, she boarded a city bus in Montgomery,nAlabamanand sat in the middle, where Black passengers in that city were allowed to sit unless a white person wanted the seat. As the bus filled with new riders, the driver told Parks to give up her seat to a white passenger. She refused. The driver called police, and Parks was arrested.
Rosa Parks is fingerprinted after being arrested for her bus protest in Montgomery, Alabama.
Photograph by Underwood Archives / Contributor / Getty Images
Her arrest sparked a major protest. For more than a year, most Black people in Montgomery stood together and refused to take city buses. (One of the leaders of the boycott was a young local pastor namednMartin Luther King, Jr.) Public vehicles stood idle, and the city lost money. Still, the Montgomery Bus Boycott didnt end until a 1956 Supreme Court decision ended racial segregation on public transportation throughout the United States.
Parks died on October 24, 2005. But throughout her life, her refusal to give up her seat inspired many others to fight for African-American rights and helped advance the civil rights movement of the 1950s and '60s.