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Rosa Parks
Most
historians date the
beginning of the
modern civil rights
movement in the United
States to December 1,
1955. That was the day
when an unknown
seamstress in
Montgomery, Alabama
refused to give up her
bus seat to a white
passenger. This brave
woman, Rosa Parks, was
arrested and fined for
violating a city
ordinance, but her
lonely act of defiance
began a movement that
ended legal
segregation in
America, and made her
an inspiration to
freedom-loving people
everywhere.
Rosa Parks was born
Rosa Louise McCauley
in Tuskegee, Alabama
to James McCauley, a
carpenter, and Leona
McCauley, a teacher.
At the age of two she
moved to her
grandparents' farm in
Pine Level, Alabama
with her mother and
younger brother,
Sylvester. At the age
of 11 she enrolled in
the Montgomery
Industrial School for
Girls, a private
school founded by
liberal-minded women
from the northern
United States. The
school's philosophy of
self-worth was
consistent with Leona
McCauley's advice to
"take advantage of the
opportunities, no
matter how few they
were."
Opportunities were few
indeed. "Back then,"
Mrs. Parks recalled in
an interview, "we
didn't have any civil
rights. It was just a
matter of survival, of
existing from one day
to the next. I
remember going to
sleep as a girl
hearing the Klan ride
at night and hearing a
lynching and being
afraid the house would
burn down." In the
same interview, she
cited her lifelong
acquaintance with fear
as the reason for her
relative fearlessness
in deciding to appeal
her conviction during
the bus boycott. "I
didn't have any
special fear," she
said. "It was more of
a relief to know that
I wasn't alone."
After attending
Alabama State Teachers
College, the young
Rosa settled in
Montgomery, with her
husband, Raymond
Parks. The couple
joined the local
chapter of the NAACP
and worked quietly for
many years to improve
the lot of
African-Americans in
the segregated south.
"I worked on numerous
cases with the NAACP,"
Mrs. Parks recalled,
"but we did not get
the publicity. There
were cases of
flogging, peonage,
murder, and rape. We
didn't seem to have
too many successes. It
was more a matter of
trying to challenge
the powers that be,
and to let it be known
that we did not wish
to continue being
second-class
citizens."
The bus incident led
to the formation of
the Montgomery
Improvement
Association, led by
the young pastor of
the Dexter Avenue
Baptist Church, Dr.
Martin Luther King,
Jr. The association
called for a boycott
of the city-owned bus
company. The boycott
lasted 382 days and
brought Mrs. Parks,
Dr. King, and their
cause to the attention
of the world. A
Supreme Court Decision
struck down the
Montgomery ordinance
under which Mrs. Parks
had been fined, and
outlawed racial
segregation on public
transportation.
In 1957, Mrs. Parks
and her husband moved
to Detroit, Michigan
where Mrs. Parks
served on the staff of
U.S. Representative
John Conyers. The
Southern Christian
Leadership Council
established an annual
Rosa Parks Freedom
Award in her honor.
After the death of her
husband in 1977, Mrs.
Parks founded the Rosa
and Raymond Parks
Institute for
Self-Development. The
Institute sponsors an
annual summer program
for teenagers called
Pathways to Freedom.
The young people tour
the country in buses,
under adult
supervision, learning
the history of their
country and of the
civil rights movement.
President Clinton
presented Rosa Parks
with the Presidential
Medal of Freedom in
1996. She received a
Congressional Gold
Medal in 1999.
When asked if she was
happy living in
retirement, Rosa Parks
replied, "I do the
very best I can to
look upon life with
optimism and hope and
looking forward to a
better day, but I
don't think there is
any such thing as
complete happiness. It
pains me that there is
still a lot of Klan
activity and racism. I
think when you say
you're happy, you have
everything that you
need and everything
that you want, and
nothing more to wish
for. I haven't reached
that stage yet."
Mrs. Parks spent her
last years living
quietly in Detroit,
where she died in 2005
at the age of 92.
After her death, her
casket was placed in
the rotunda of the
United States Capitol
for two days, so the
nation could pay its
respects to the woman
whose courage had
changed the lives of
so many. She is the
only woman and second
African American in
American history to
lie in state at the
Capitol, an honor
usually reserved for
Presidents of the
United States.
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