On December 1, 1955, Rosa Parks, a 42-year-old African
American woman who worked as a seamstress, boarded this Montgomery City bus to
go home from work. On this bus on that day, Rosa Parks initiated a new era in
the American quest for freedom and equality.She sat near the middle of the bus,
just behind the 10 seats reserved for whites. Soon all of the seats in the bus
were filled. When a white man entered the bus, the driver (following the
standard practice of segregation) insisted that all four blacks sitting just
behind the white section give up their seats so that the man could sit there.
Mrs. Parks, who was an active member of the local NAACP, quietly refused to
give up her seat.
Her action was spontaneous and not pre-meditated, although
her previous civil rights involvement and strong sense of justice were obvious
influences. "When I made that decision," she said later, “I knew that
I had the strength of my ancestors with me.”
She was arrested and convicted of violating the laws of
segregation, known as “Jim Crow laws.” Mrs. Parks appealed her conviction and
thus formally challenged the legality of segregation.
At the same time, local civil rights activists initiated a
boycott of the Montgomery bus system. In cities across the South, segregated
bus companies were daily reminders of the inequities of American society. Since
African Americans made up about 75 percent of the riders in Montgomery, the
boycott posed a serious economic threat to the company and a social threat to
white rule in the city.
A group named the Montgomery Improvement Association,
composed of local activists and ministers, organized the boycott. As their
leader, they chose a young Baptist minister who was new to Montgomery: Martin
Luther King, Jr. Sparked by Mrs. Parks’ action, the boycott lasted 381 days,
into December 1956 when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the segregation law
was unconstitutional and the Montgomery buses were integrated. The Montgomery
Bus Boycott was the beginning of a revolutionary era of non-violent mass protests
in support of civil rights in the United States.
It was not just an accident that the civil rights movement
began on a city bus. In a famous 1896 case involving a black man on a train,
Plessy v. Ferguson, the U.S. Supreme Court enunciated the “separate but equal”
rationale for Jim Crow. Of course, facilities and treatment were never equal.
Under Jim Crow customs and laws, it was relatively easy to
separate the races in every area of life except transportation. Bus and train
companies couldn’t afford separate cars and so blacks and whites had to occupy
the same space.

Thus, transportation was one the most volatile arenas for
race relations in the South. Mrs. Parks remembers going to elementary school in
Pine Level, Alabama, where buses took white kids to the new school but black
kids had to walk to their school.
“I'd see the bus pass every day,” she said. “But to me, that
was a way of life; we had no choice but to accept what was the custom. The bus
was among the first ways I realized there was a black world and a white world”
(emphasis added).
Montgomery’s Jim Crow customs were particularly harsh and
gave bus drivers great latitude in making decisions on where people could sit.
The law even gave bus drivers the authority to carry guns to enforce their
edicts. Mrs. Parks’ attorney Fred Gray remembered, “Virtually every
African-American person in Montgomery had some negative experience with the
buses. But we had no choice. We had to use the buses for transportation.”
Civil rights advocates had outlawed Jim Crow in interstate
train travel, and blacks in several Southern cities attacked the practice of
segregatedSee the bus specificationsbus systems. There had been a bus boycott
in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, in 1953, but black leaders compromised before making
real gains. Joann Robinson, a black university professor and activist in
Montgomery, had suggested the idea of a bus boycott months before the Parks
arrest.
Two other women had been arrested on buses in Montgomery
before Parks and were considered by black leaders as potential clients for
challenging the law. However, both were rejected because black leaders felt
they would not gain white support. When she heard that the well-respected Rosa
Parks had been arrested, one Montgomery African American woman exclaimed, “They’ve
messed with the wrong one now.”
In the South, city buses were lightning rods for civil
rights activists. It took someone with the courage and character of Rosa Parks
to strike with lightning. And it required the commitment of the entire African
American community to fan the flames ignited by that lightning into the fires
of the civil rights revolution.
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