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Rosa Parks

Rosa Louise McCauley Parks (February 4, 1913 – October 24, 2005) was an American activist in the civil rights movement best known for her pivotal role in the Montgomery bus boycott. The United States Congress has honored her as "the first lady of civil rights" and "the mother of the freedom movement".[1] Parks became an NAACP activist in 1943, participating in several high-profile civil rights campaigns. On December 1, 1955, in Montgomery, Alabama, Parks rejected bus driver James F. Blake's order to vacate a row of four seats in the "colored" section in favor of a white passenger, once the "white" section was filled.[2] Parks was not the first person to resist bus segregation,[3] but the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) believed that she was the best candidate for seeing through a court challenge after her arrest for civil disobedience in violating Alabama segregation laws, and she helped inspire the Black community to boycott the Montgomery buses for over a year. The case became bogged down in the state courts, but the federal Montgomery bus lawsuit Browder v. Gayle resulted in a November 1956 decision that bus segregation is unconstitutional under the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.[4]

Rosa Parks
Rosa Parks in 1955, with Martin Luther King Jr. in the background
Born
Rosa Louise McCauley

(1913-02-04)February 4, 1913
DiedOctober 24, 2005(2005-10-24) (aged 92)
Resting placeWoodlawn Cemetery, Detroit
OccupationCivil rights activist
Known forMontgomery bus boycott
MovementCivil Rights Movement
Spouse(s)Raymond Parks
(m. 1932; died 1977)
Signature

Parks's act of defiance and the Montgomery bus boycott became important symbols of the movement. She became an international icon of resistance to racial segregation, and organized and collaborated with civil rights leaders, including Edgar Nixon and Martin Luther King Jr. At the time, Parks was employed as a seamstress at a local department store and was secretary of the Montgomery chapter of the NAACP. She had recently attended the Highlander Folk School, a Tennessee center for training activists for workers' rights and racial equality. Although widely honored in later years, she also suffered for her act; she was fired from her job and received death threats for years afterwards.[5] Shortly after the boycott, she moved to Detroit, where she briefly found similar work. From 1965 to 1988, she served as secretary and receptionist to John Conyers, an African-American US Representative. She was also active in the Black Power movement and the support of political prisoners in the US.

After retirement, Parks wrote her autobiography and continued to insist that there was more work to be done in the struggle for justice.[6] Parks received national recognition, including the NAACP's 1979 Spingarn Medal, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the Congressional Gold Medal, and a posthumous statue in the United States Capitol's National Statuary Hall. Upon her death in 2005, she was the first woman to lie in honor in the Capitol Rotunda. California and Missouri commemorate Rosa Parks Day on her birthday, February 4, while Ohio, Oregon, and Texas commemorate the anniversary of her arrest, December 1.[7]

Early life

Rosa Parks was born Rosa Louise McCauley in Tuskegee, Alabama, on February 4, 1913, to Leona (née Edwards), a teacher, and James McCauley, a carpenter. In addition to African ancestry, one of Parks's great-grandfathers was Scots-Irish, and one of her great-grandmothers was a part–Native American slave.[8][9][10][11] As a child, she suffered from chronic tonsillitis and was often bedridden; the family could not afford to pay for an operation to address the condition.[12]: 12  When her parents separated, she moved with her mother to her grandparents' farm outside Pine Level, where her younger brother Sylvester was born.[12]: 12–13  Rosa joined the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME), a century-old independent Black denomination founded by free Blacks in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in the early nineteenth century,[13][14] and remained a member throughout her life.[15]: 6 

McCauley attended rural schools[16] until the age of eleven. Before that, her mother taught her "a good deal about sewing." She started piecing quilts from around the age of six, as her mother and grandmother were making quilts, she put her first quilt together by herself around the age of ten, which was unusual, as quilting was mainly a family activity performed when there was no field work or chores to be done. She learned more sewing in school from the age of eleven; she sewed her own "first dress [she] could wear".[17] As a student at the Industrial School for Girls in Montgomery from 1925 to 1928, she took academic and vocational courses. As the school closed in 1928, she tranferred to Booker T. Washington Junior High School for her final year.[15]: 10  Parks went on to a laboratory school set up by the Alabama State Teachers College for Negroes for secondary education, but dropped out to care for her grandmother and later her mother, after they became ill.[12]: 23–27 [18]

Around the turn of the 20th century, the former Confederate states had adopted new constitutions and electoral laws that effectively disenfranchised Black voters and, in Alabama, many poor white voters as well. Under the white-established Jim Crow laws, passed after Democrats regained control of southern legislatures, racial segregation was imposed in public facilities and retail stores in the South, including public transportation. Bus and train companies enforced seating policies with separate sections for blacks and whites. School bus transportation was unavailable in any form for Black schoolchildren in the South, and Black education was always underfunded.

Parks recalled going to elementary school in Pine Level, where school buses took white students to their new school and Black students had to walk to theirs:

I'd see the bus pass every day ... 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.[19]

Although Parks's autobiography recounts early memories of the kindness of white strangers, she could not ignore the racism of her society. When the Ku Klux Klan marched down the street in front of their house, Parks recalls her grandfather guarding the front door with a shotgun.[20] The Montgomery Industrial School, founded and staffed by white northerners for Black children, was burned twice by arsonists. Its faculty was ostracized by the white community.[18]

Repeatedly bullied by white children in her neighborhood, Parks often fought back physically. She later said: "As far back as I remember, I could never think in terms of accepting physical abuse without some form of retaliation if possible."[15]: 208 

Early activism

In 1932, Rosa married Raymond Parks, a barber from Montgomery.[15]: 13, 15 [21] He was a member of the NAACP,[21] which at the time was collecting money to support the defense of the Scottsboro Boys, a group of Black men falsely accused of raping two white women.[22]: 690  Rosa took numerous jobs, ranging from domestic worker to hospital aide. At her husband's urging, she finished her high school studies in 1933, at a time when fewer than 7% of African Americans had a high-school diploma.

In December 1943, Parks became active in the civil rights movement, joined the Montgomery chapter of the NAACP, and was elected secretary at a time when this was considered a woman's job. She later said, "I was the only woman there, and they needed a secretary, and I was too timid to say no."[23] She continued as secretary until 1957. She worked for the local NAACP leader Edgar Nixon, even though he maintained that "Women don't need to be nowhere but in the kitchen."[24] When Parks asked, "Well, what about me?", he replied: "I need a secretary and you are a good one."[24]

In 1944, in her capacity as secretary, she investigated the gang-rape of Recy Taylor, a Black woman from Abbeville, Alabama. Parks and other civil rights activists organized "The Committee for Equal Justice for Mrs. Recy Taylor", launching what the Chicago Defender called "the strongest campaign for equal justice to be seen in a decade".[25] Parks continued her work as an anti-rape activist five years later when she helped organize protests in support of Gertrude Perkins, a Black woman who was raped by two white Montgomery police officers.[26]

Although never a member of the Communist Party, she attended meetings with her husband. The notorious Scottsboro case had been brought to prominence by the Communist Party.[27]

In the 1940s, Parks and her husband were members of the League of Women Voters. Sometime soon after 1944, she held a brief job at Maxwell Air Force Base, which, despite its location in Montgomery, Alabama, did not permit racial segregation because it was federal property. She rode on its integrated trolley. Speaking to her biographer, Parks noted, "You might just say Maxwell opened my eyes up." Parks worked as a housekeeper and seamstress for Clifford and Virginia Durr, a white couple. Politically liberal, the Durrs became her friends. They encouraged—and eventually helped sponsor—Parks in the summer of 1955 to attend the Highlander Folk School, an education center for activism in workers' rights and racial equality in Monteagle, Tennessee. There Parks was mentored by the veteran organizer Septima Clark.[15] In 1945, despite the Jim Crow laws and discrimination by registrars, she succeeded in registering to vote on her third try.[22]: 690 

In August 1955, Black teenager Emmett Till was brutally murdered after reportedly flirting with a young white woman while visiting relatives in Mississippi.[28] On November 27, 1955, four days before she would make her stand on the bus, Rosa Parks attended a mass meeting at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery that addressed this case, as well as the recent murders of the activists George W. Lee and Lamar Smith. The featured speaker was T. R. M. Howard, a Black civil rights leader from Mississippi who headed the Regional Council of Negro Leadership.[29] Howard brought news of the recent acquittal of the two men who had murdered Till. Parks was deeply saddened and angry at the news, particularly because Till's case had garnered much more attention than any of the cases she and the Montgomery NAACP had worked on—and yet, the two men still walked free.[30]

Parks arrest and bus boycott

 
The seat layout on the bus where Parks sat, December 1, 1955

Montgomery buses: law and prevailing customs

In 1900, Montgomery had passed a city ordinance to segregate bus passengers by race. Conductors were empowered to assign seats to achieve that goal. According to the law, no passenger would be required to move or give up their seat and stand if the bus was crowded and no other seats were available. Over time and by custom, however, Montgomery bus drivers adopted the practice of requiring Black riders to move when there were no white-only seats left.[31]

The first four rows of seats on each Montgomery bus were reserved for whites. Buses had "colored" sections for Black people generally in the rear of the bus, although Blacks composed more than 75% of the ridership. The sections were not fixed but were determined by placement of a movable sign. Black people could sit in the middle rows until the white section filled. If more whites needed seats, Blacks were to move to seats in the rear, stand, or, if there was no room, leave the bus.[32]

Black people could not sit across the aisle in the same row as white people. The driver could move the "colored" section sign, or remove it altogether. If white people were already sitting in the front, Black people had to board at the front to pay the fare, then disembark and reenter through the rear door.[32]

For years, the Black community had complained that the situation was unfair. Parks said, "My resisting being mistreated on the bus did not begin with that particular arrest. I did a lot of walking in Montgomery."[16]

One day in 1943, Parks boarded a bus and paid the fare. She then moved to a seat, but driver James F. Blake told her to follow city rules and enter the bus again from the back door. When Parks exited the vehicle, Blake drove off without her.[33] Parks waited for the next bus, determined never to ride with Blake again.[34]

Refusal to move

Rosa Parks's arrest
 
Booking photo of Parks following her February 1956 arrest during the Montgomery bus boycott
 
Police report on Parks, December 1, 1955, page 1
 
Police report on Parks, December 1, 1955, page 2
 
Fingerprint card of Parks from her arrest on December 1, 1955
 
Parks being fingerprinted on February 22, 1956, when she was arrested again, along with 73 other people, after a grand jury indicted 113 African Americans for organizing the Montgomery bus boycott[35][36]

After working all day, Parks boarded the Cleveland Avenue bus, a General Motors Old Look bus belonging to the Montgomery City Lines,[37] around 6 pm, Thursday, December 1, 1955, in downtown Montgomery. She paid her fare and sat in an empty seat in the first row of back seats reserved for Blacks in the "colored" section. Near the middle of the bus, her row was directly behind the ten seats reserved for white passengers.[38]

Initially, she did not notice that the bus driver was the same man, James F. Blake, who had left her in the rain in 1943. As the bus traveled along its regular route, all of the white-only seats in the bus filled up. The bus reached the third stop in front of the Empire Theater, and several white passengers boarded. Blake noted that two or three white passengers were standing, as the front of the bus had filled to capacity.[38]

The bus driver moved the "colored" section sign behind Parks and demanded that four Black people give up their seats in the middle section so that the white passengers could sit. Years later, in recalling the events of the day, Parks said, "When that white driver stepped back toward us, when he waved his hand and ordered us up and out of our seats, I felt a determination cover my body like a quilt on a winter night."[38]

By Parks's account, Blake said, "Y'all better make it light on yourselves and let me have those seats."[39] Three of them complied. Parks said, "The driver wanted us to stand up, the four of us. We didn't move at the beginning, but he says, 'Let me have these seats.' And the other three people moved, but I didn't."[40] The Black man sitting next to her gave up his seat.[41]

Parks moved, but toward the window seat; she did not get up to move to the redesignated colored section.[41] Parks later said about being asked to move to the rear of the bus, "I thought of Emmett Till—a 14-year-old African American who was lynched in Mississippi in 1955, after being accused of offending a white woman in her family's grocery store, whose killers were tried and acquitted—and I just couldn't go back."[42]

Blake said, "Why don't you stand up?" Parks responded, "I don't think I should have to stand up." Blake called the police to arrest Parks. When recalling the incident for Eyes on the Prize, a 1987 public television series on the Civil Rights Movement, Parks said, "When he saw me still sitting, he asked if I was going to stand up, and I said, 'No, I'm not.' And he said, 'Well, if you don't stand up, I'm going to have to call the police and have you arrested.' I said, 'You may do that.'"[43]

During a 1956 radio interview with Sydney Rogers in West Oakland several months after her arrest, Parks said she had decided, "I would have to know for once and for all what rights I had as a human being and a citizen."[44]

In her autobiography, My Story, she said:

People always say that I didn't give up my seat because I was tired, but that isn't true. I was not tired physically, or no more tired than I usually was at the end of a working day. I was not old, although some people have an image of me as being old then. I was forty-two. No, the only tired I was, was tired of giving in.[45]

When Parks refused to give up her seat, a police officer arrested her. As the officer took her away, she recalled that she asked, "Why do you push us around?" She remembered him saying, "I don't know, but the law's the law, and you're under arrest."[46] She later said, "I only knew that, as I was being arrested, that it was the very last time that I would ever ride in humiliation of this kind. ... "[40]

Parks was charged with a violation of Chapter 6, Section 11, segregation law of the Montgomery City code,[47] although technically she had not taken a white-only seat; she had been in a colored section.[48] Edgar Nixon, president of the Montgomery chapter of the NAACP and leader of the Pullman Porters Union, and her friend Clifford Durr bailed Parks out of jail that evening.[49][50]

Parks did not originate the idea of protesting segregation with a bus sit-in. Those preceding her included Bayard Rustin in 1942,[51] Irene Morgan in 1946, Lillie Mae Bradford in 1951,[52] Sarah Louise Keys in 1952,[citation needed] and the members of the ultimately successful Browder v. Gayle 1956 lawsuit (Claudette Colvin, Aurelia Browder, Susie McDonald, and Mary Louise Smith) who were arrested in Montgomery for not giving up their bus seats months before Parks.[53]

Montgomery bus boycott

Nixon conferred with Jo Ann Robinson, an Alabama State College professor and member of the Women's Political Council (WPC), about the Parks case. Robinson believed it important to seize the opportunity and stayed up all night mimeographing over 35,000 handbills announcing a bus boycott. The Women's Political Council was the first group to officially endorse the boycott.

On Sunday, December 4, 1955, plans for the Montgomery bus boycott were announced at Black churches in the area, and a front-page article in the Montgomery Advertiser helped spread the word. At a church rally that night, those attending agreed unanimously to continue the boycott until they were treated with the level of courtesy they expected, until Black drivers were hired, and until seating in the middle of the bus was handled on a first-come basis.

The next day, Parks was tried on charges of disorderly conduct and violating a local ordinance. The trial lasted 30 minutes. After being found guilty and fined $10, plus $4 in court costs (combined total equivalent to $153 in 2022),[40] Parks appealed her conviction and formally challenged the legality of racial segregation. In a 1992 interview with National Public Radio's Lynn Neary, Parks recalled:

I did not want to be mistreated, I did not want to be deprived of a seat that I had paid for. It was just time ... there was opportunity for me to take a stand to express the way I felt about being treated in that manner.[54] I had not planned to get arrested. I had plenty to do without having to end up in jail. But when I had to face that decision, I didn't hesitate to do so because I felt that we had endured that too long. The more we gave in, the more we complied with that kind of treatment, the more oppressive it became.[55]

On the day of Parks's trial—December 5, 1955—the WPC distributed the 35,000 leaflets. The handbill read,

We are ... asking every Negro to stay off the buses Monday in protest of the arrest and trial ... You can afford to stay out of school for one day. If you work, take a cab, or walk. But please, children and grown-ups, don't ride the bus at all on Monday. Please stay off the buses Monday.[56]

It rained that day, but the Black community persevered in their boycott. Some rode in carpools, while others traveled in Black-operated cabs that charged the same fare as the bus, 10 cents (equivalent to $1.09 in 2022). Most of the remainder of the 40,000 Black commuters walked, some as far as 20 miles (30 km).

That evening after the success of the one-day boycott, a group of 16 to 18 people gathered at the Mt. Zion AME Zion Church to discuss boycott strategies. At that time, Parks was introduced but not asked to speak, despite a standing ovation and calls from the crowd for her to speak; when she asked if she should say something, the reply was, "Why, you've said enough."[57] This movement also sparked riots leading up to the 1956 Sugar Bowl.[58]

The group agreed that a new organization was needed to lead the boycott effort if it were to continue. Rev. Ralph Abernathy suggested the name "Montgomery Improvement Association" (MIA).[59]: 432  The name was adopted, and the MIA was formed. Its members elected as their president Martin Luther King Jr., a relative newcomer to Montgomery, who was a young and mostly unknown minister of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church.[60]

That Monday night, 50 leaders of the African-American community gathered to discuss actions to respond to Parks's arrest. Edgar Nixon, the president of the NAACP, said, "My God, look what segregation has put in my hands!"[61] Parks was considered the ideal plaintiff for a test case against city and state segregation laws, as she was seen as a responsible, mature woman with a good reputation. She was securely married and employed, was regarded as possessing a quiet and dignified demeanor, and was politically savvy. King said that Parks was regarded as "one of the finest citizens of Montgomery—not one of the finest Negro citizens, but one of the finest citizens of Montgomery".[16]

Parks's court case was being slowed down in appeals through the Alabama courts on their way to a Federal appeal and the process could have taken years.[62] Holding together a boycott for that length of time would have been a great strain. In the end, Black residents of Montgomery continued the boycott for 381 days. Dozens of public buses stood idle for months, severely damaging the bus transit company's finances, until the city repealed its law requiring segregation on public buses following the US Supreme Court ruling in Browder v. Gayle that it was unconstitutional. Parks was not included as a plaintiff in the Browder decision because the attorney Fred Gray concluded the courts would perceive they were attempting to circumvent her prosecution on her charges working their way through the Alabama state court system.[63]

Parks played an important part in raising international awareness of the plight of African Americans and the civil rights struggle. King wrote in his 1958 book Stride Toward Freedom that Parks's arrest was the catalyst rather than the cause of the protest: "The cause lay deep in the record of similar injustices."[59]: 437  He wrote, "Actually, no one can understand the action of Mrs. Parks unless he realizes that eventually the cup of endurance runs over, and the human personality cries out, 'I can take it no longer.'"[59]: 424 

Detroit years

1960s

 
Parks on one of Montgomery's buses on December 21, 1956, the day they became legally integrated. Behind her is a UPI reporter.

After her arrest, Parks became an icon of the Civil Rights Movement but suffered hardships as a result. Due to economic sanctions used against activists, she lost her job at the department store. Her husband lost his job as a barber at Maxwell Air Force Base[64] after his boss forbade him to talk about his wife or the legal case.[65] Parks traveled and spoke about the issues.

In 1957, Raymond and Rosa Parks left Montgomery for Hampton, Virginia; mostly because she was unable to find work. She also disagreed with King and other leaders of Montgomery's struggling civil rights movement about how to proceed, and was constantly receiving death threats.[15] In Hampton, she found a job as a hostess in an inn at Hampton Institute, a historically Black college.

Later that year, at the urging of her brother and sister-in-law in Detroit, Sylvester and Daisy McCauley, Rosa and Raymond Parks and her mother moved north to join them. The City of Detroit attempted to cultivate a progressive reputation, but Parks encountered numerous signs of discrimination against African-Americans. Schools were effectively segregated, and services in Black neighborhoods substandard. In 1964, Parks told an interviewer that, "I don't feel a great deal of difference here ... Housing segregation is just as bad, and it seems more noticeable in the larger cities." She regularly participated in the movement for open and fair housing.[66]

Parks rendered crucial assistance in the first campaign for Congress by John Conyers. She persuaded Martin Luther King, who was generally reluctant to endorse local candidates, to appear with Conyers, thereby boosting the novice candidate's profile.[66] When Conyers was elected, he hired her as a secretary and receptionist for his congressional office in Detroit. She held this position until she retired in 1988.[16] In a telephone interview with CNN on October 24, 2005, Conyers recalled, "You treated her with deference because she was so quiet, so serene—just a very special person ... There was only one Rosa Parks."[67] Doing much of the daily constituent work for Conyers, Parks often focused on socio-economic issues including welfare, education, job discrimination, and affordable housing. She visited schools, hospitals, senior citizen facilities, and other community meetings and kept Conyers grounded in community concerns and activism.[66]

Parks participated in activism nationally during the mid-1960s, traveling to support the Selma-to-Montgomery Marches, the Freedom Now Party,[15] and the Lowndes County Freedom Organization. She also befriended Malcolm X, who she regarded as a personal hero.[68]

Like many Detroit Blacks, Parks remained particularly concerned about housing issues. She herself lived in a neighborhood, Virginia Park, which had been compromised by highway construction and urban renewal. By 1962, these policies had destroyed 10,000 structures in Detroit, displacing 43,096 people, 70 percent of them African-American. Parks lived just a mile from the center of the riot that took place in Detroit in 1967, and she considered housing discrimination a major factor that provoked the disorder.[66]

In the aftermath Parks collaborated with members of the League of Revolutionary Black Workers and the Republic of New Afrika in raising awareness of police abuse during the conflict. She served on a "people's tribunal" on August 30, 1967, investigating the killing of three young men by police during the 1967 Detroit uprising, in what came to be known as the Algiers Motel incident.[69] She also helped form the Virginia Park district council to help rebuild the area. The council facilitated the building of the only Black-owned shopping center in the country.[66] Parks took part in the Black power movement, attending the Philadelphia Black Power conference, and the Black Political Convention in Gary, Indiana. She also supported and visited the Black Panther school in Oakland.[70][71][72]

1970s

 
Rosa Parks c. 1978

In the 1970s, Parks organized for the freedom of political prisoners in the United States, particularly cases involving issues of self-defense. She helped found the Detroit chapter of the Joanne Little Defense Committee, and also worked in support of the Wilmington 10, the RNA 11, and Gary Tyler.[73][74] When Angela Davis was acquitted, Parks introduced her to an audience of 12,000 as a "dear sister who has suffered so much persecution".[75] Following national outcry around her case, Little succeeded in her defense that she used deadly force to resist sexual assault and was acquitted.[65] Tyler was finally released in April 2016 after 41 years in prison.[76]

The 1970s were a decade of loss for Parks in her personal life. Her family was plagued with illness; she and her husband had suffered stomach ulcers for years and both required hospitalization. In spite of her fame and constant speaking engagements, Parks was not a wealthy woman. She donated most of the money from speaking to civil rights causes, and lived on her staff salary and her husband's pension. Medical bills and time missed from work caused financial strain that required her to accept assistance from church groups and admirers.

Her husband died of throat cancer on August 19, 1977, and her brother, her only sibling, died of cancer that November. Her personal ordeals caused her to become removed from the civil rights movement. She learned from a newspaper of the death of Fannie Lou Hamer, once a close friend. Parks suffered two broken bones in a fall on an icy sidewalk, an injury which caused considerable and recurring pain. She decided to move with her mother into an apartment for senior citizens. There she nursed her mother Leona through the final stages of cancer and geriatric dementia until she died in 1979 at the age of 92.

1980s

In 1980, Parks—widowed and without immediate family—rededicated herself to civil rights and educational organizations. She co-founded the Rosa L. Parks Scholarship Foundation for college-bound high school seniors,[77][78] to which she donated most of her speaker fees. In February 1987, she co-founded, with Elaine Eason Steele, the Rosa and Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development, an institute that runs the "Pathways to Freedom" bus tours which introduce young people to important civil rights and Underground Railroad sites throughout the country. Parks also served on the Board of Advocates of Planned Parenthood.[79][80][81]

Though her health declined as she entered her seventies, Parks continued to make many appearances and devoted considerable energy to these causes. Unrelated to her activism, Parks loaned quilts of her own making to an exhibit at Michigan State University of quilts by African-American residents of Michigan.[17]

1990s

 
Parks in 1993

In 1992, Parks published Rosa Parks: My Story, an autobiography aimed at younger readers, which recounts her life leading to her decision to keep her seat on the bus. A few years later, she published Quiet Strength (1995), her memoir, which focuses on her faith.

At age 81, Parks was robbed and assaulted in her home in central Detroit on August 30, 1994. The assailant, Joseph Skipper, broke down the door but claimed he had chased away an intruder. He requested a reward and when Parks paid him, he demanded more. Parks refused and he attacked her. Hurt and badly shaken, Parks called a friend, who called the police. A neighborhood manhunt led to Skipper's capture and reported beating. Parks was treated at Detroit Receiving Hospital for facial injuries and swelling on the right side of her face. Parks said about the attack on her by the African-American man, "Many gains have been made ... But as you can see, at this time we still have a long way to go." Skipper was sentenced to 8 to 15 years and was transferred to prison in another state for his own safety.[82][83][84][85]

Suffering anxiety upon returning to her small central Detroit house following the ordeal, Parks moved into Riverfront Towers, a secure high-rise apartment building. Learning of Parks's move, Little Caesars owner Mike Ilitch offered to pay for her housing expenses for as long as necessary.[86]

In 1994, the Ku Klux Klan applied to sponsor a portion of United States Interstate 55 in St. Louis County and Jefferson County, Missouri, near St. Louis, for cleanup (which allowed them to have signs stating that this section of highway was maintained by the organization). Since the state could not refuse the KKK's sponsorship, the Missouri legislature voted to name the highway section the "Rosa Parks Highway". When asked how she felt about this honor, she is reported to have commented, "It is always nice to be thought of."[87][88]

In 1999, Parks filmed a cameo appearance for the television series Touched by an Angel.[89] It was her last appearance on screen; Parks began to suffer from health problems due to old age.

2000s

In 2002, Parks received an eviction notice from her $1,800 per month (equivalent to $2,900 in 2022) apartment for non-payment of rent. Parks was incapable of managing her own financial affairs by this time due to age-related physical and mental decline. Her rent was paid from a collection taken by Hartford Memorial Baptist Church in Detroit. When her rent became delinquent and her impending eviction was highly publicized in 2004, executives of the ownership company announced they had forgiven the back rent and would allow Parks, by then 91 and in extremely poor health, to live rent-free in the building for the remainder of her life. Elaine Steele, manager of the nonprofit Rosa and Raymond Parks Institute, defended Parks's care and stated that the eviction notices were sent in error.[90] Several of Parks's family members alleged that her financial affairs had been mismanaged.[91]

In 2016, Parks's former residence in Detroit was threatened with demolition. A Berlin-based American artist, Ryan Mendoza, arranged to have the house disassembled, moved to his garden in Germany, and partly restored. It served as a museum honoring Rosa Parks.[92] In 2018, the house was moved back to the United States. Brown University was planning to exhibit the house, but the display was cancelled.[93] The house was exhibited during part of 2018 in an arts centre in Providence, Rhode Island.[94]

Death and funeral

Parks died of natural causes on October 24, 2005, at the age of 92, in her apartment on the east side of Detroit. She and her husband never had children and she outlived her only sibling. She was survived by her sister-in-law (Raymond's sister), 13 nieces and nephews and their families, and several cousins, most of them residents of Michigan or Alabama.

City officials in Montgomery and Detroit announced on October 27, 2005, that the front seats of their city buses would be reserved with black ribbons in honor of Parks until her funeral. Parks' coffin was flown to Montgomery and taken in a horse-drawn hearse to the St. Paul African Methodist Episcopal (AME) church, where she lay in repose at the altar on October 29, 2005, dressed in the uniform of a church deaconess. A memorial service was held there the following morning. One of the speakers, United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, said that if it had not been for Parks, she would probably have never become the Secretary of State. In the evening the casket was transported to Washington, D.C., and transported by a bus similar to the one in which she made her protest, to lie in honor in the rotunda of the U.S. Capitol.

 
The casket of Rosa Parks at the U.S. Capitol rotunda

Parks was the 31st person, the first American who had not been a U.S. government official, and the second private person (after the French planner Pierre L'Enfant) to be honored in this way. She was the first woman and the second Black person to lie in honor in the Capitol.[95][96] An estimated 50,000 people viewed the casket there, and the event was broadcast on television on October 31, 2005. A memorial service was held that afternoon at Metropolitan AME Church in Washington, D.C.[97]

With her body and casket returned to Detroit, for two days, Parks lay in repose at the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History. Her funeral service was seven hours long and was held on November 2, 2005, at the Greater Grace Temple Church in Detroit. After the service, an honor guard from the Michigan National Guard draped the U.S. flag over the casket and carried it to a horse-drawn hearse, which was intended to carry it, in daylight, to the cemetery. As the hearse passed the thousands of people who were viewing the procession, many clapped, cheered loudly and released white balloons. Parks was interred between her husband and mother at Detroit's Woodlawn Cemetery in the chapel's mausoleum. The chapel was renamed the Rosa L. Parks Freedom Chapel in her honor.[98]

Legacy and honors

 
Rosa Parks statue by Eugene Daub (2013), in National Statuary Hall, United States Capitol

By placing her statue in the heart of the nation's Capitol, we commemorate her work for a more perfect union, and we commit ourselves to continue to struggle for justice for every American.[135]

  • Portion of Interstate 96 in Detroit was renamed by the state legislature as the Rosa Parks Memorial Highway in December 2005.[136]
External videos
  Rosa Parks 100th Birthday Commemoration at The Henry Ford, Dearborn, MI, February 4, 2013, C-SPAN
  • 2013:
    • On February 1, President Barack Obama proclaimed February 4, 2013, as the "100th Anniversary of the Birth of Rosa Parks". He called "upon all Americans to observe this day with appropriate service, community, and education programs to honor Rosa Parks's enduring legacy".[144]
    • On February 4, to celebrate Rosa Parks's 100th birthday, the Henry Ford Museum declared the day a "National Day of Courage" with 12 hours of virtual and on-site activities featuring nationally recognized speakers, musical and dramatic interpretative performances, a panel presentation of "Rosa's Story" and a reading of the tale "Quiet Strength". The actual bus on which Rosa Parks sat was made available for the public to board and sit in the seat that Rosa Parks refused to give up.[145]
    • On February 4, 2,000 birthday wishes gathered from people throughout the United States were transformed into 200 graphics messages at a celebration held on her 100th Birthday at the Davis Theater for the Performing Arts in Montgomery, Alabama. This was the 100th Birthday Wishes Project managed by the Rosa Parks Museum at Troy University and the Mobile Studio and was also a declared event by the Senate.[145]
    • During both events the USPS unveiled a postage stamp in her honor.[146]
    • On February 27, Parks became the first African-American woman to have her likeness depicted in National Statuary Hall. The monument, created by sculptor Eugene Daub, is a part of the Capitol Art Collection among nine other women featured in the National Statuary Hall Collection.[147]
  • 2014:
  • 2015:
  • 2016:
    • The house lived in by Rosa Parks's brother, Sylvester McCauley, his wife Daisy, and their 13 children, and where Rosa Parks often visited and stayed after leaving Montgomery, was bought by her niece Rhea McCauley for $500 and donated to the artist Ryan Mendoza. It was subsequently dismantled and shipped to Berlin where it was re-erected in Mendoza's garden.[153] In 2018 it was returned to the United States and rebuilt at the Waterfire Arts Center, Providence, Rhode Island, where it was put on public display, accompanied by a range of interpretive materials and public and scholarly events.[154]
    • The National Museum of African American History and Culture was opened; it contains among other things the dress which Rosa Parks was sewing the day she refused to give up her seat to a white man.[155][156][157][a]
  • 2018:
  • 2019:
    • A statue of Rosa Parks was unveiled in Montgomery, Alabama.[159]
  • 2021:

In popular culture

Film and television

The documentary Mighty Times: The Legacy of Rosa Parks (2001) received a 2002 nomination for Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject.[161] The Rosa Parks Story (2002) starred Angela Bassett; film scholar Delphine Letort argued that in the work, "the historical narrative of the civil rights movement is simplified into a story that reproduces stereotypes popularized by both race melodramas and mainstream media."[162]: 31–32  The film Barbershop (2002) featured a barber, played by Cedric the Entertainer, arguing with others that other African Americans before Parks had been active in bus integration, but she was renowned as an NAACP secretary. The activists Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton launched a boycott against the film, contending it was "disrespectful", but NAACP president Kweisi Mfume stated he thought the controversy was "overblown".[163] Parks was offended and boycotted the NAACP 2003 Image Awards ceremony, which Cedric hosted.[164]

In 2013, Parks was portrayed by Llewella Gideon in the first series of the Sky Arts comedy series Psychobitches.[165] The 2018 episode "Rosa", of the science-fiction television series Doctor Who, centers on Rosa Parks, as portrayed by Vinette Robinson.[166] The UK children's historical show Horrible Histories included a song about Parks in its fifth series.[167]

In 2022, the documentary The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks was released on Peacock; it is the first full-length documentary about Parks.[168] Also that year, a major motion film Bowl Game Armageddon was announced, which will spotlight Rosa Parks and Emmett Till leading up to the 1956 Sugar Bowl and Atlanta riots[169][158]

Music

In March 1999, Parks filed a lawsuit (Rosa Parks v. LaFace Records) against American hip-hop duo OutKast and their record company, claiming that the duo's song "Rosa Parks", the most successful radio single of their 1998 album Aquemini, had used her name without permission.[170] The lawsuit was settled on April 15, 2005 (six months and nine days before Parks's death); OutKast, their producer and record labels paid Parks an undisclosed cash settlement. They also agreed to work with the Rosa and Raymond Parks Institute to create educational programs about the life of Rosa Parks. The record label and OutKast admitted no wrongdoing. Responsibility for the payment of legal fees was not disclosed.[171]

In 2020, rapper Nicki Minaj incorporated Rosa Parks into her song "Yikes" where she rapped, "All you bitches Rosa Park, uh-oh, get your ass up" in reference to the Montgomery bus boycott.[172][173]

Other

In 1979, the Supersisters trading card set was produced and distributed; one of the cards featured Parks's name and picture. She is card No. 27 in the set.[174] In 2019, Mattel released a Barbie doll in Parks's likeness as part of their "Inspiring Women" series.[175][176]

See also

  • Elizabeth Jennings Graham, 1854 sued and won case that led to desegregation of streetcars in New York City
  • Charlotte L. Brown, desegregated streetcars in San Francisco in the 1860s
  • John Mitchell Jr., in 1904, he organized a Black boycott of Richmond, Virginia's segregated trolley system
  • Irene Morgan, in 1944, sued and won Supreme Court ruling that segregation of interstate buses was unconstitutional
  • Claudette Colvin, arrested in March 1955, nine months before Parks' arrest, for refusing to give up her seat to a white woman on a crowded, segregated Montgomery bus.
  • Cleveland Court Apartments 620–638, home of Rosa and Raymond Parks, and her mother, Leona McCauley, during the Montgomery bus boycott from 1955 to 1956.
  • Rosa Parks Act, 2006 Act approved in the Legislature of the U.S. state of Alabama to allow those considered law-breakers at the time of the Montgomery bus boycott to clear their arrest records of the charge of civil disobedience, including Rosa Parks posthumously.
  • List of civil rights leaders
  • Timeline of the civil rights movement

Notes

  1. ^ Ruth Bonner was the daughter of Elijah B. Odom of Mississippi, an escaped slave who lived through the years of Reconstruction and segregation.[157]

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Further reading

  • Barnes, Catherine A. Journey from Jim Crow: The Desegregation of Southern Transit, Columbia University Press, 1983.
  • Brinkley, Douglas. Rosa Parks: A Life, Penguin Books, 2005. ISBN 0-14-303600-9
  • Morris, Aldon (Summer 2012). "Rosa Parks, Strategic Activist (sidebar)". Contexts. 11 (3): 25. doi:10.1177/1536504212456178.
  • Editorial (May 17, 1974). "Two decades later"(subscription required) February 4, 2020, at the Wayback Machine. The New York Times. p. 38. ("Within a year of Brown, Rosa Parks, a tired seamstress in Montgomery, Alabama, was, like Homer Plessy sixty years earlier, arrested for her refusal to move to the back of the bus.")
  • Parks, Rosa, with James Haskins, Rosa Parks: My Story. New York: Scholastic Inc., 1992. ISBN 0-590-46538-4
  • Theoharis, Jeanne The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks, Beacon Press, 2015, ISBN 978-0807076927

External links

  • "Rosa Parks Papers". Library of Congress.
  • at Troy University
  • The Rosa and Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development
  • Parks article in the Encyclopedia of Alabama December 16, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  • Teaching and Learning Rosa Parks' Rebellious Life
  • Norwood, Arlisha. "Rosa Parks". National Women's History Museum. 2017.

Multimedia and interviews

Others

  • Complete audio/video and newspaper archive of the Montgomery bus boycott December 13, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  • Rosa Parks: cadre of working-class movement that ended Jim Crow
  • Print media reaction to Parks' death in the Newseum archive of front page images from 2005-10-25.
  • Rosa Parks at IMDb
  • Photo of Rosa Parks Childhood Home

rosa, parks, other, uses, disambiguation, rosa, louise, mccauley, parks, february, 1913, october, 2005, american, activist, civil, rights, movement, best, known, pivotal, role, montgomery, boycott, united, states, congress, honored, first, lady, civil, rights,. For other uses see Rosa Parks disambiguation Rosa Louise McCauley Parks February 4 1913 October 24 2005 was an American activist in the civil rights movement best known for her pivotal role in the Montgomery bus boycott The United States Congress has honored her as the first lady of civil rights and the mother of the freedom movement 1 Parks became an NAACP activist in 1943 participating in several high profile civil rights campaigns On December 1 1955 in Montgomery Alabama Parks rejected bus driver James F Blake s order to vacate a row of four seats in the colored section in favor of a white passenger once the white section was filled 2 Parks was not the first person to resist bus segregation 3 but the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People NAACP believed that she was the best candidate for seeing through a court challenge after her arrest for civil disobedience in violating Alabama segregation laws and she helped inspire the Black community to boycott the Montgomery buses for over a year The case became bogged down in the state courts but the federal Montgomery bus lawsuit Browder v Gayle resulted in a November 1956 decision that bus segregation is unconstitutional under the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment to the U S Constitution 4 Rosa ParksRosa Parks in 1955 with Martin Luther King Jr in the backgroundBornRosa Louise McCauley 1913 02 04 February 4 1913Tuskegee Alabama U S DiedOctober 24 2005 2005 10 24 aged 92 Detroit Michigan U S Resting placeWoodlawn Cemetery DetroitOccupationCivil rights activistKnown forMontgomery bus boycottMovementCivil Rights MovementSpouse s Raymond Parks m 1932 died 1977 SignatureParks s act of defiance and the Montgomery bus boycott became important symbols of the movement She became an international icon of resistance to racial segregation and organized and collaborated with civil rights leaders including Edgar Nixon and Martin Luther King Jr At the time Parks was employed as a seamstress at a local department store and was secretary of the Montgomery chapter of the NAACP She had recently attended the Highlander Folk School a Tennessee center for training activists for workers rights and racial equality Although widely honored in later years she also suffered for her act she was fired from her job and received death threats for years afterwards 5 Shortly after the boycott she moved to Detroit where she briefly found similar work From 1965 to 1988 she served as secretary and receptionist to John Conyers an African American US Representative She was also active in the Black Power movement and the support of political prisoners in the US After retirement Parks wrote her autobiography and continued to insist that there was more work to be done in the struggle for justice 6 Parks received national recognition including the NAACP s 1979 Spingarn Medal the Presidential Medal of Freedom the Congressional Gold Medal and a posthumous statue in the United States Capitol s National Statuary Hall Upon her death in 2005 she was the first woman to lie in honor in the Capitol Rotunda California and Missouri commemorate Rosa Parks Day on her birthday February 4 while Ohio Oregon and Texas commemorate the anniversary of her arrest December 1 7 Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Early activism 2 Parks arrest and bus boycott 2 1 Montgomery buses law and prevailing customs 2 2 Refusal to move 2 3 Montgomery bus boycott 3 Detroit years 3 1 1960s 3 2 1970s 3 3 1980s 3 4 1990s 3 5 2000s 4 Death and funeral 5 Legacy and honors 6 In popular culture 6 1 Film and television 6 2 Music 6 3 Other 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External links 11 1 Multimedia and interviews 11 2 OthersEarly lifeRosa Parks was born Rosa Louise McCauley in Tuskegee Alabama on February 4 1913 to Leona nee Edwards a teacher and James McCauley a carpenter In addition to African ancestry one of Parks s great grandfathers was Scots Irish and one of her great grandmothers was a part Native American slave 8 9 10 11 As a child she suffered from chronic tonsillitis and was often bedridden the family could not afford to pay for an operation to address the condition 12 12 When her parents separated she moved with her mother to her grandparents farm outside Pine Level where her younger brother Sylvester was born 12 12 13 Rosa joined the African Methodist Episcopal Church AME a century old independent Black denomination founded by free Blacks in Philadelphia Pennsylvania in the early nineteenth century 13 14 and remained a member throughout her life 15 6 McCauley attended rural schools 16 until the age of eleven Before that her mother taught her a good deal about sewing She started piecing quilts from around the age of six as her mother and grandmother were making quilts she put her first quilt together by herself around the age of ten which was unusual as quilting was mainly a family activity performed when there was no field work or chores to be done She learned more sewing in school from the age of eleven she sewed her own first dress she could wear 17 As a student at the Industrial School for Girls in Montgomery from 1925 to 1928 she took academic and vocational courses As the school closed in 1928 she tranferred to Booker T Washington Junior High School for her final year 15 10 Parks went on to a laboratory school set up by the Alabama State Teachers College for Negroes for secondary education but dropped out to care for her grandmother and later her mother after they became ill 12 23 27 18 Around the turn of the 20th century the former Confederate states had adopted new constitutions and electoral laws that effectively disenfranchised Black voters and in Alabama many poor white voters as well Under the white established Jim Crow laws passed after Democrats regained control of southern legislatures racial segregation was imposed in public facilities and retail stores in the South including public transportation Bus and train companies enforced seating policies with separate sections for blacks and whites School bus transportation was unavailable in any form for Black schoolchildren in the South and Black education was always underfunded Parks recalled going to elementary school in Pine Level where school buses took white students to their new school and Black students had to walk to theirs I d see the bus pass every day 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 19 Although Parks s autobiography recounts early memories of the kindness of white strangers she could not ignore the racism of her society When the Ku Klux Klan marched down the street in front of their house Parks recalls her grandfather guarding the front door with a shotgun 20 The Montgomery Industrial School founded and staffed by white northerners for Black children was burned twice by arsonists Its faculty was ostracized by the white community 18 Repeatedly bullied by white children in her neighborhood Parks often fought back physically She later said As far back as I remember I could never think in terms of accepting physical abuse without some form of retaliation if possible 15 208 Early activism In 1932 Rosa married Raymond Parks a barber from Montgomery 15 13 15 21 He was a member of the NAACP 21 which at the time was collecting money to support the defense of the Scottsboro Boys a group of Black men falsely accused of raping two white women 22 690 Rosa took numerous jobs ranging from domestic worker to hospital aide At her husband s urging she finished her high school studies in 1933 at a time when fewer than 7 of African Americans had a high school diploma In December 1943 Parks became active in the civil rights movement joined the Montgomery chapter of the NAACP and was elected secretary at a time when this was considered a woman s job She later said I was the only woman there and they needed a secretary and I was too timid to say no 23 She continued as secretary until 1957 She worked for the local NAACP leader Edgar Nixon even though he maintained that Women don t need to be nowhere but in the kitchen 24 When Parks asked Well what about me he replied I need a secretary and you are a good one 24 In 1944 in her capacity as secretary she investigated the gang rape of Recy Taylor a Black woman from Abbeville Alabama Parks and other civil rights activists organized The Committee for Equal Justice for Mrs Recy Taylor launching what the Chicago Defender called the strongest campaign for equal justice to be seen in a decade 25 Parks continued her work as an anti rape activist five years later when she helped organize protests in support of Gertrude Perkins a Black woman who was raped by two white Montgomery police officers 26 Although never a member of the Communist Party she attended meetings with her husband The notorious Scottsboro case had been brought to prominence by the Communist Party 27 In the 1940s Parks and her husband were members of the League of Women Voters Sometime soon after 1944 she held a brief job at Maxwell Air Force Base which despite its location in Montgomery Alabama did not permit racial segregation because it was federal property She rode on its integrated trolley Speaking to her biographer Parks noted You might just say Maxwell opened my eyes up Parks worked as a housekeeper and seamstress for Clifford and Virginia Durr a white couple Politically liberal the Durrs became her friends They encouraged and eventually helped sponsor Parks in the summer of 1955 to attend the Highlander Folk School an education center for activism in workers rights and racial equality in Monteagle Tennessee There Parks was mentored by the veteran organizer Septima Clark 15 In 1945 despite the Jim Crow laws and discrimination by registrars she succeeded in registering to vote on her third try 22 690 In August 1955 Black teenager Emmett Till was brutally murdered after reportedly flirting with a young white woman while visiting relatives in Mississippi 28 On November 27 1955 four days before she would make her stand on the bus Rosa Parks attended a mass meeting at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery that addressed this case as well as the recent murders of the activists George W Lee and Lamar Smith The featured speaker was T R M Howard a Black civil rights leader from Mississippi who headed the Regional Council of Negro Leadership 29 Howard brought news of the recent acquittal of the two men who had murdered Till Parks was deeply saddened and angry at the news particularly because Till s case had garnered much more attention than any of the cases she and the Montgomery NAACP had worked on and yet the two men still walked free 30 Parks arrest and bus boycott nbsp The seat layout on the bus where Parks sat December 1 1955Montgomery buses law and prevailing customs In 1900 Montgomery had passed a city ordinance to segregate bus passengers by race Conductors were empowered to assign seats to achieve that goal According to the law no passenger would be required to move or give up their seat and stand if the bus was crowded and no other seats were available Over time and by custom however Montgomery bus drivers adopted the practice of requiring Black riders to move when there were no white only seats left 31 The first four rows of seats on each Montgomery bus were reserved for whites Buses had colored sections for Black people generally in the rear of the bus although Blacks composed more than 75 of the ridership The sections were not fixed but were determined by placement of a movable sign Black people could sit in the middle rows until the white section filled If more whites needed seats Blacks were to move to seats in the rear stand or if there was no room leave the bus 32 Black people could not sit across the aisle in the same row as white people The driver could move the colored section sign or remove it altogether If white people were already sitting in the front Black people had to board at the front to pay the fare then disembark and reenter through the rear door 32 For years the Black community had complained that the situation was unfair Parks said My resisting being mistreated on the bus did not begin with that particular arrest I did a lot of walking in Montgomery 16 One day in 1943 Parks boarded a bus and paid the fare She then moved to a seat but driver James F Blake told her to follow city rules and enter the bus again from the back door When Parks exited the vehicle Blake drove off without her 33 Parks waited for the next bus determined never to ride with Blake again 34 Refusal to move Rosa Parks s arrest nbsp Booking photo of Parks following her February 1956 arrest during the Montgomery bus boycott nbsp Police report on Parks December 1 1955 page 1 nbsp Police report on Parks December 1 1955 page 2 nbsp Fingerprint card of Parks from her arrest on December 1 1955 nbsp Parks being fingerprinted on February 22 1956 when she was arrested again along with 73 other people after a grand jury indicted 113 African Americans for organizing the Montgomery bus boycott 35 36 After working all day Parks boarded the Cleveland Avenue bus a General Motors Old Look bus belonging to the Montgomery City Lines 37 around 6 pm Thursday December 1 1955 in downtown Montgomery She paid her fare and sat in an empty seat in the first row of back seats reserved for Blacks in the colored section Near the middle of the bus her row was directly behind the ten seats reserved for white passengers 38 Initially she did not notice that the bus driver was the same man James F Blake who had left her in the rain in 1943 As the bus traveled along its regular route all of the white only seats in the bus filled up The bus reached the third stop in front of the Empire Theater and several white passengers boarded Blake noted that two or three white passengers were standing as the front of the bus had filled to capacity 38 The bus driver moved the colored section sign behind Parks and demanded that four Black people give up their seats in the middle section so that the white passengers could sit Years later in recalling the events of the day Parks said When that white driver stepped back toward us when he waved his hand and ordered us up and out of our seats I felt a determination cover my body like a quilt on a winter night 38 By Parks s account Blake said Y all better make it light on yourselves and let me have those seats 39 Three of them complied Parks said The driver wanted us to stand up the four of us We didn t move at the beginning but he says Let me have these seats And the other three people moved but I didn t 40 The Black man sitting next to her gave up his seat 41 Parks moved but toward the window seat she did not get up to move to the redesignated colored section 41 Parks later said about being asked to move to the rear of the bus I thought of Emmett Till a 14 year old African American who was lynched in Mississippi in 1955 after being accused of offending a white woman in her family s grocery store whose killers were tried and acquitted and I just couldn t go back 42 Blake said Why don t you stand up Parks responded I don t think I should have to stand up Blake called the police to arrest Parks When recalling the incident for Eyes on the Prize a 1987 public television series on the Civil Rights Movement Parks said When he saw me still sitting he asked if I was going to stand up and I said No I m not And he said Well if you don t stand up I m going to have to call the police and have you arrested I said You may do that 43 During a 1956 radio interview with Sydney Rogers in West Oakland several months after her arrest Parks said she had decided I would have to know for once and for all what rights I had as a human being and a citizen 44 In her autobiography My Story she said People always say that I didn t give up my seat because I was tired but that isn t true I was not tired physically or no more tired than I usually was at the end of a working day I was not old although some people have an image of me as being old then I was forty two No the only tired I was was tired of giving in 45 When Parks refused to give up her seat a police officer arrested her As the officer took her away she recalled that she asked Why do you push us around She remembered him saying I don t know but the law s the law and you re under arrest 46 She later said I only knew that as I was being arrested that it was the very last time that I would ever ride in humiliation of this kind 40 Parks was charged with a violation of Chapter 6 Section 11 segregation law of the Montgomery City code 47 although technically she had not taken a white only seat she had been in a colored section 48 Edgar Nixon president of the Montgomery chapter of the NAACP and leader of the Pullman Porters Union and her friend Clifford Durr bailed Parks out of jail that evening 49 50 Parks did not originate the idea of protesting segregation with a bus sit in Those preceding her included Bayard Rustin in 1942 51 Irene Morgan in 1946 Lillie Mae Bradford in 1951 52 Sarah Louise Keys in 1952 citation needed and the members of the ultimately successful Browder v Gayle 1956 lawsuit Claudette Colvin Aurelia Browder Susie McDonald and Mary Louise Smith who were arrested in Montgomery for not giving up their bus seats months before Parks 53 Montgomery bus boycott Main article Montgomery bus boycott Nixon conferred with Jo Ann Robinson an Alabama State College professor and member of the Women s Political Council WPC about the Parks case Robinson believed it important to seize the opportunity and stayed up all night mimeographing over 35 000 handbills announcing a bus boycott The Women s Political Council was the first group to officially endorse the boycott On Sunday December 4 1955 plans for the Montgomery bus boycott were announced at Black churches in the area and a front page article in the Montgomery Advertiser helped spread the word At a church rally that night those attending agreed unanimously to continue the boycott until they were treated with the level of courtesy they expected until Black drivers were hired and until seating in the middle of the bus was handled on a first come basis The next day Parks was tried on charges of disorderly conduct and violating a local ordinance The trial lasted 30 minutes After being found guilty and fined 10 plus 4 in court costs combined total equivalent to 153 in 2022 40 Parks appealed her conviction and formally challenged the legality of racial segregation In a 1992 interview with National Public Radio s Lynn Neary Parks recalled I did not want to be mistreated I did not want to be deprived of a seat that I had paid for It was just time there was opportunity for me to take a stand to express the way I felt about being treated in that manner 54 I had not planned to get arrested I had plenty to do without having to end up in jail But when I had to face that decision I didn t hesitate to do so because I felt that we had endured that too long The more we gave in the more we complied with that kind of treatment the more oppressive it became 55 On the day of Parks s trial December 5 1955 the WPC distributed the 35 000 leaflets The handbill read We are asking every Negro to stay off the buses Monday in protest of the arrest and trial You can afford to stay out of school for one day If you work take a cab or walk But please children and grown ups don t ride the bus at all on Monday Please stay off the buses Monday 56 It rained that day but the Black community persevered in their boycott Some rode in carpools while others traveled in Black operated cabs that charged the same fare as the bus 10 cents equivalent to 1 09 in 2022 Most of the remainder of the 40 000 Black commuters walked some as far as 20 miles 30 km That evening after the success of the one day boycott a group of 16 to 18 people gathered at the Mt Zion AME Zion Church to discuss boycott strategies At that time Parks was introduced but not asked to speak despite a standing ovation and calls from the crowd for her to speak when she asked if she should say something the reply was Why you ve said enough 57 This movement also sparked riots leading up to the 1956 Sugar Bowl 58 The group agreed that a new organization was needed to lead the boycott effort if it were to continue Rev Ralph Abernathy suggested the name Montgomery Improvement Association MIA 59 432 The name was adopted and the MIA was formed Its members elected as their president Martin Luther King Jr a relative newcomer to Montgomery who was a young and mostly unknown minister of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church 60 That Monday night 50 leaders of the African American community gathered to discuss actions to respond to Parks s arrest Edgar Nixon the president of the NAACP said My God look what segregation has put in my hands 61 Parks was considered the ideal plaintiff for a test case against city and state segregation laws as she was seen as a responsible mature woman with a good reputation She was securely married and employed was regarded as possessing a quiet and dignified demeanor and was politically savvy King said that Parks was regarded as one of the finest citizens of Montgomery not one of the finest Negro citizens but one of the finest citizens of Montgomery 16 Parks s court case was being slowed down in appeals through the Alabama courts on their way to a Federal appeal and the process could have taken years 62 Holding together a boycott for that length of time would have been a great strain In the end Black residents of Montgomery continued the boycott for 381 days Dozens of public buses stood idle for months severely damaging the bus transit company s finances until the city repealed its law requiring segregation on public buses following the US Supreme Court ruling in Browder v Gayle that it was unconstitutional Parks was not included as a plaintiff in the Browder decision because the attorney Fred Gray concluded the courts would perceive they were attempting to circumvent her prosecution on her charges working their way through the Alabama state court system 63 Parks played an important part in raising international awareness of the plight of African Americans and the civil rights struggle King wrote in his 1958 book Stride Toward Freedom that Parks s arrest was the catalyst rather than the cause of the protest The cause lay deep in the record of similar injustices 59 437 He wrote Actually no one can understand the action of Mrs Parks unless he realizes that eventually the cup of endurance runs over and the human personality cries out I can take it no longer 59 424 Detroit years1960s nbsp Parks on one of Montgomery s buses on December 21 1956 the day they became legally integrated Behind her is a UPI reporter After her arrest Parks became an icon of the Civil Rights Movement but suffered hardships as a result Due to economic sanctions used against activists she lost her job at the department store Her husband lost his job as a barber at Maxwell Air Force Base 64 after his boss forbade him to talk about his wife or the legal case 65 Parks traveled and spoke about the issues In 1957 Raymond and Rosa Parks left Montgomery for Hampton Virginia mostly because she was unable to find work She also disagreed with King and other leaders of Montgomery s struggling civil rights movement about how to proceed and was constantly receiving death threats 15 In Hampton she found a job as a hostess in an inn at Hampton Institute a historically Black college Later that year at the urging of her brother and sister in law in Detroit Sylvester and Daisy McCauley Rosa and Raymond Parks and her mother moved north to join them The City of Detroit attempted to cultivate a progressive reputation but Parks encountered numerous signs of discrimination against African Americans Schools were effectively segregated and services in Black neighborhoods substandard In 1964 Parks told an interviewer that I don t feel a great deal of difference here Housing segregation is just as bad and it seems more noticeable in the larger cities She regularly participated in the movement for open and fair housing 66 Parks rendered crucial assistance in the first campaign for Congress by John Conyers She persuaded Martin Luther King who was generally reluctant to endorse local candidates to appear with Conyers thereby boosting the novice candidate s profile 66 When Conyers was elected he hired her as a secretary and receptionist for his congressional office in Detroit She held this position until she retired in 1988 16 In a telephone interview with CNN on October 24 2005 Conyers recalled You treated her with deference because she was so quiet so serene just a very special person There was only one Rosa Parks 67 Doing much of the daily constituent work for Conyers Parks often focused on socio economic issues including welfare education job discrimination and affordable housing She visited schools hospitals senior citizen facilities and other community meetings and kept Conyers grounded in community concerns and activism 66 Parks participated in activism nationally during the mid 1960s traveling to support the Selma to Montgomery Marches the Freedom Now Party 15 and the Lowndes County Freedom Organization She also befriended Malcolm X who she regarded as a personal hero 68 Like many Detroit Blacks Parks remained particularly concerned about housing issues She herself lived in a neighborhood Virginia Park which had been compromised by highway construction and urban renewal By 1962 these policies had destroyed 10 000 structures in Detroit displacing 43 096 people 70 percent of them African American Parks lived just a mile from the center of the riot that took place in Detroit in 1967 and she considered housing discrimination a major factor that provoked the disorder 66 In the aftermath Parks collaborated with members of the League of Revolutionary Black Workers and the Republic of New Afrika in raising awareness of police abuse during the conflict She served on a people s tribunal on August 30 1967 investigating the killing of three young men by police during the 1967 Detroit uprising in what came to be known as the Algiers Motel incident 69 She also helped form the Virginia Park district council to help rebuild the area The council facilitated the building of the only Black owned shopping center in the country 66 Parks took part in the Black power movement attending the Philadelphia Black Power conference and the Black Political Convention in Gary Indiana She also supported and visited the Black Panther school in Oakland 70 71 72 1970s nbsp Rosa Parks c 1978In the 1970s Parks organized for the freedom of political prisoners in the United States particularly cases involving issues of self defense She helped found the Detroit chapter of the Joanne Little Defense Committee and also worked in support of the Wilmington 10 the RNA 11 and Gary Tyler 73 74 When Angela Davis was acquitted Parks introduced her to an audience of 12 000 as a dear sister who has suffered so much persecution 75 Following national outcry around her case Little succeeded in her defense that she used deadly force to resist sexual assault and was acquitted 65 Tyler was finally released in April 2016 after 41 years in prison 76 The 1970s were a decade of loss for Parks in her personal life Her family was plagued with illness she and her husband had suffered stomach ulcers for years and both required hospitalization In spite of her fame and constant speaking engagements Parks was not a wealthy woman She donated most of the money from speaking to civil rights causes and lived on her staff salary and her husband s pension Medical bills and time missed from work caused financial strain that required her to accept assistance from church groups and admirers Her husband died of throat cancer on August 19 1977 and her brother her only sibling died of cancer that November Her personal ordeals caused her to become removed from the civil rights movement She learned from a newspaper of the death of Fannie Lou Hamer once a close friend Parks suffered two broken bones in a fall on an icy sidewalk an injury which caused considerable and recurring pain She decided to move with her mother into an apartment for senior citizens There she nursed her mother Leona through the final stages of cancer and geriatric dementia until she died in 1979 at the age of 92 1980s In 1980 Parks widowed and without immediate family rededicated herself to civil rights and educational organizations She co founded the Rosa L Parks Scholarship Foundation for college bound high school seniors 77 78 to which she donated most of her speaker fees In February 1987 she co founded with Elaine Eason Steele the Rosa and Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development an institute that runs the Pathways to Freedom bus tours which introduce young people to important civil rights and Underground Railroad sites throughout the country Parks also served on the Board of Advocates of Planned Parenthood 79 80 81 Though her health declined as she entered her seventies Parks continued to make many appearances and devoted considerable energy to these causes Unrelated to her activism Parks loaned quilts of her own making to an exhibit at Michigan State University of quilts by African American residents of Michigan 17 1990s nbsp Parks in 1993In 1992 Parks published Rosa Parks My Story an autobiography aimed at younger readers which recounts her life leading to her decision to keep her seat on the bus A few years later she published Quiet Strength 1995 her memoir which focuses on her faith At age 81 Parks was robbed and assaulted in her home in central Detroit on August 30 1994 The assailant Joseph Skipper broke down the door but claimed he had chased away an intruder He requested a reward and when Parks paid him he demanded more Parks refused and he attacked her Hurt and badly shaken Parks called a friend who called the police A neighborhood manhunt led to Skipper s capture and reported beating Parks was treated at Detroit Receiving Hospital for facial injuries and swelling on the right side of her face Parks said about the attack on her by the African American man Many gains have been made But as you can see at this time we still have a long way to go Skipper was sentenced to 8 to 15 years and was transferred to prison in another state for his own safety 82 83 84 85 Suffering anxiety upon returning to her small central Detroit house following the ordeal Parks moved into Riverfront Towers a secure high rise apartment building Learning of Parks s move Little Caesars owner Mike Ilitch offered to pay for her housing expenses for as long as necessary 86 In 1994 the Ku Klux Klan applied to sponsor a portion of United States Interstate 55 in St Louis County and Jefferson County Missouri near St Louis for cleanup which allowed them to have signs stating that this section of highway was maintained by the organization Since the state could not refuse the KKK s sponsorship the Missouri legislature voted to name the highway section the Rosa Parks Highway When asked how she felt about this honor she is reported to have commented It is always nice to be thought of 87 88 In 1999 Parks filmed a cameo appearance for the television series Touched by an Angel 89 It was her last appearance on screen Parks began to suffer from health problems due to old age 2000s In 2002 Parks received an eviction notice from her 1 800 per month equivalent to 2 900 in 2022 apartment for non payment of rent Parks was incapable of managing her own financial affairs by this time due to age related physical and mental decline Her rent was paid from a collection taken by Hartford Memorial Baptist Church in Detroit When her rent became delinquent and her impending eviction was highly publicized in 2004 executives of the ownership company announced they had forgiven the back rent and would allow Parks by then 91 and in extremely poor health to live rent free in the building for the remainder of her life Elaine Steele manager of the nonprofit Rosa and Raymond Parks Institute defended Parks s care and stated that the eviction notices were sent in error 90 Several of Parks s family members alleged that her financial affairs had been mismanaged 91 In 2016 Parks s former residence in Detroit was threatened with demolition A Berlin based American artist Ryan Mendoza arranged to have the house disassembled moved to his garden in Germany and partly restored It served as a museum honoring Rosa Parks 92 In 2018 the house was moved back to the United States Brown University was planning to exhibit the house but the display was cancelled 93 The house was exhibited during part of 2018 in an arts centre in Providence Rhode Island 94 Death and funeralParks died of natural causes on October 24 2005 at the age of 92 in her apartment on the east side of Detroit She and her husband never had children and she outlived her only sibling She was survived by her sister in law Raymond s sister 13 nieces and nephews and their families and several cousins most of them residents of Michigan or Alabama nbsp Wikinews has related news Body of Rosa Parks to lie in honor at U S Capitol City officials in Montgomery and Detroit announced on October 27 2005 that the front seats of their city buses would be reserved with black ribbons in honor of Parks until her funeral Parks coffin was flown to Montgomery and taken in a horse drawn hearse to the St Paul African Methodist Episcopal AME church where she lay in repose at the altar on October 29 2005 dressed in the uniform of a church deaconess A memorial service was held there the following morning One of the speakers United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said that if it had not been for Parks she would probably have never become the Secretary of State In the evening the casket was transported to Washington D C and transported by a bus similar to the one in which she made her protest to lie in honor in the rotunda of the U S Capitol nbsp The casket of Rosa Parks at the U S Capitol rotundaParks was the 31st person the first American who had not been a U S government official and the second private person after the French planner Pierre L Enfant to be honored in this way She was the first woman and the second Black person to lie in honor in the Capitol 95 96 An estimated 50 000 people viewed the casket there and the event was broadcast on television on October 31 2005 A memorial service was held that afternoon at Metropolitan AME Church in Washington D C 97 With her body and casket returned to Detroit for two days Parks lay in repose at the Charles H Wright Museum of African American History Her funeral service was seven hours long and was held on November 2 2005 at the Greater Grace Temple Church in Detroit After the service an honor guard from the Michigan National Guard draped the U S flag over the casket and carried it to a horse drawn hearse which was intended to carry it in daylight to the cemetery As the hearse passed the thousands of people who were viewing the procession many clapped cheered loudly and released white balloons Parks was interred between her husband and mother at Detroit s Woodlawn Cemetery in the chapel s mausoleum The chapel was renamed the Rosa L Parks Freedom Chapel in her honor 98 Legacy and honors nbsp Rosa Parks statue by Eugene Daub 2013 in National Statuary Hall United States Capitol1963 Inspired by the Montgomery boycott Paul Stephenson initiated a bus boycott in Bristol England to protest against the refusal of a local bus company to employ Black and Asian drivers and conductors 99 100 1976 Detroit renamed 12th Street Rosa Parks Boulevard 101 1979 The NAACP awarded Parks the Spingarn Medal 102 its highest honor 103 1980 She received the Martin Luther King Jr Award 104 1982 California State University Fresno awarded Parks the African American Achievement Award The honor given to deserving students in succeeding years became the Rosa Parks Awards 105 106 1983 She was inducted into Michigan Women s Hall of Fame for her achievements in civil rights 107 1984 She received a Candace Award from the National Coalition of 100 Black Women 108 1990 Parks was invited to be part of the group welcoming Nelson Mandela upon his release from prison in South Africa 109 Parks was in attendance as part of Interstate 475 outside of Toledo Ohio was named after her 110 1992 She received the Peace Abbey Courage of Conscience Award along with Dr Benjamin Spock and others at the Kennedy Library and Museum in Boston Massachusetts 111 1993 She was inducted into the National Women s Hall of Fame 112 1994 She received an honorary doctorate from Florida State University in Tallahassee FL 113 1994 She received an honorary doctorate from Soka University in Tokyo Japan 114 115 1995 She received the Academy of Achievement s Golden Plate Award in Williamsburg Virginia 116 1996 She was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom the highest honor given by the US executive branch 117 1998 She was the first ever recipient of the International Freedom Conductor Award from the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center honoring people whose actions support those struggling with modern day issues related to freedom 118 119 1999 She received the Congressional Gold Medal the highest award given by the US legislative branch the medal bears the legend Mother of the Modern Day Civil Rights Movement 120 Time named Parks one of the 20 most influential and iconic figures of the 20th century 56 President Bill Clinton honored her in his State of the Union address saying She s sitting down with the first lady tonight and she may get up or not as she chooses 121 2000 Her home state awarded her the Alabama Academy of Honor 122 She received the first Governor s Medal of Honor for Extraordinary Courage 123 She was awarded two dozen honorary doctorates from universities worldwide 124 She was made an honorary member of the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority 125 the Rosa Parks Library and Museum on the campus of Troy University in Montgomery was dedicated to her 2002 Scholar Molefi Kete Asante listed Parks on his list of 100 Greatest African Americans 126 A portion of the Interstate 10 freeway in Los Angeles was named in her honor She received the Walter P Reuther Humanitarian Award from Wayne State University 127 2003 Bus No 2857 on which Parks was riding was restored and placed on display in The Henry Ford museum 128 2004 In the Los Angeles County MetroRail system the Imperial Highway Wilmington station where the A Line connects with the C Line has been officially named the Rosa Parks Station 129 130 2005 Senate Concurrent Resolution 61 109th Congress 1st Session was agreed to October 29 2005 This set the stage for her to become the 1st woman to lie in honor in the Capitol Rotunda 131 On October 30 2005 President George W Bush issued a proclamation ordering that all flags on U S public areas both within the country and abroad be flown at half staff on the day of Parks s funeral Metro Transit in King County Washington placed posters and stickers dedicating the first forward facing seat of all its buses in Parks s memory shortly after her death 132 133 The American Public Transportation Association declared December 1 2005 the 50th anniversary of her arrest to be a National Transit Tribute to Rosa Parks Day 134 On that anniversary President George W Bush signed Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 109 116 text PDF directing that a statue of Parks be placed in the United States Capitol s National Statuary Hall In signing the resolution directing the Joint Commission on the Library to do so the President stated By placing her statue in the heart of the nation s Capitol we commemorate her work for a more perfect union and we commit ourselves to continue to struggle for justice for every American 135 Portion of Interstate 96 in Detroit was renamed by the state legislature as the Rosa Parks Memorial Highway in December 2005 136 2006 At Super Bowl XL played at Detroit s Ford Field long time Detroit residents Coretta Scott King and Parks were remembered and honored by a moment of silence The Super Bowl was dedicated to their memory 137 Parks s nieces and nephews and Martin Luther King III joined the coin toss ceremonies standing alongside former University of Michigan star Tom Brady who flipped the coin On February 14 the County Executive of Nassau County New York Tom Suozzi announced that the Hempstead Transit Center would be renamed the Rosa Parks Hempstead Transit Center in her honor On October 27 Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell signed a bill into law designating the portion of Pennsylvania Route 291 through Chester as the Rosa Parks Memorial Highway 138 2007 Nashville Tennessee renamed MetroCenter Boulevard 8th Avenue North US 41A and SR 12 as Rosa L Parks Boulevard 139 On March 14 2008 the State of California Government Center at 464 W 4th St on the northwest corner of Court and 4th streets in San Bernardino was renamed the Rosa Parks Memorial Building 140 141 2009 On July 14 the Rosa Parks Transit Center opened in Detroit at the corner of Michigan and Cass Avenues 142 2010 in Grand Rapids Michigan a plaza in the heart of the city was named Rosa Parks Circle 2012 A street in West Valley City Utah the state s second largest city leading to the Utah Cultural Celebration Center was renamed Rosa Parks Drive 143 External videos nbsp Rosa Parks 100th Birthday Commemoration at The Henry Ford Dearborn MI February 4 2013 C SPAN2013 On February 1 President Barack Obama proclaimed February 4 2013 as the 100th Anniversary of the Birth of Rosa Parks He called upon all Americans to observe this day with appropriate service community and education programs to honor Rosa Parks s enduring legacy 144 On February 4 to celebrate Rosa Parks s 100th birthday the Henry Ford Museum declared the day a National Day of Courage with 12 hours of virtual and on site activities featuring nationally recognized speakers musical and dramatic interpretative performances a panel presentation of Rosa s Story and a reading of the tale Quiet Strength The actual bus on which Rosa Parks sat was made available for the public to board and sit in the seat that Rosa Parks refused to give up 145 On February 4 2 000 birthday wishes gathered from people throughout the United States were transformed into 200 graphics messages at a celebration held on her 100th Birthday at the Davis Theater for the Performing Arts in Montgomery Alabama This was the 100th Birthday Wishes Project managed by the Rosa Parks Museum at Troy University and the Mobile Studio and was also a declared event by the Senate 145 During both events the USPS unveiled a postage stamp in her honor 146 On February 27 Parks became the first African American woman to have her likeness depicted in National Statuary Hall The monument created by sculptor Eugene Daub is a part of the Capitol Art Collection among nine other women featured in the National Statuary Hall Collection 147 2014 The asteroid 284996 Rosaparks discovered in 2010 by the Wide field Infrared Survey Explorer was named in her memory 148 The official naming citation was published by the Minor Planet Center on September 9 2014 M P C 89835 148 149 A statue of Parks by Thomas Jay Warren was dedicated at Essex County Courthouse in Newark New Jersey 150 151 2015 The papers of Rosa Parks were cataloged into the Library of Congress after years of a legal battle 152 On December 13 the new Rosa Parks Railway Station opened in Paris France 2016 The house lived in by Rosa Parks s brother Sylvester McCauley his wife Daisy and their 13 children and where Rosa Parks often visited and stayed after leaving Montgomery was bought by her niece Rhea McCauley for 500 and donated to the artist Ryan Mendoza It was subsequently dismantled and shipped to Berlin where it was re erected in Mendoza s garden 153 In 2018 it was returned to the United States and rebuilt at the Waterfire Arts Center Providence Rhode Island where it was put on public display accompanied by a range of interpretive materials and public and scholarly events 154 The National Museum of African American History and Culture was opened it contains among other things the dress which Rosa Parks was sewing the day she refused to give up her seat to a white man 155 156 157 a 2018 Continuing the Conversation a public sculpture of Parks was unveiled on the main campus of the Georgia Institute of Technology 158 2019 A statue of Rosa Parks was unveiled in Montgomery Alabama 159 2021 On January 20 a bust of Rosa Parks by Artis Lane was added to the Oval Office when Joe Biden began his presidency The sculpture is currently displayed next to Augustus Saint Gaudens bust of Abraham Lincoln 160 nbsp The Rosa Parks Congressional Gold Medal nbsp Parks and U S President Bill Clinton nbsp Rosa Parks Transit Center in Detroit nbsp U S President Barack Obama sitting on the bus Parks was arrested sitting in the same row Obama is in but on the opposite side nbsp A plaque entitled The Bus Stop at Dexter Ave and Montgomery St the place Rosa Parks boarded the bus pays tribute to her and the success of the Montgomery bus boycott nbsp The No 2857 bus on which Parks was riding before her arrest a GM old look transit bus serial number 1132 is now a museum exhibit at the Henry Ford Museum nbsp Rosa Parks Railway Station in ParisIn popular cultureFilm and television The documentary Mighty Times The Legacy of Rosa Parks 2001 received a 2002 nomination for Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject 161 The Rosa Parks Story 2002 starred Angela Bassett film scholar Delphine Letort argued that in the work the historical narrative of the civil rights movement is simplified into a story that reproduces stereotypes popularized by both race melodramas and mainstream media 162 31 32 The film Barbershop 2002 featured a barber played by Cedric the Entertainer arguing with others that other African Americans before Parks had been active in bus integration but she was renowned as an NAACP secretary The activists Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton launched a boycott against the film contending it was disrespectful but NAACP president Kweisi Mfume stated he thought the controversy was overblown 163 Parks was offended and boycotted the NAACP 2003 Image Awards ceremony which Cedric hosted 164 In 2013 Parks was portrayed by Llewella Gideon in the first series of the Sky Arts comedy series Psychobitches 165 The 2018 episode Rosa of the science fiction television series Doctor Who centers on Rosa Parks as portrayed by Vinette Robinson 166 The UK children s historical show Horrible Histories included a song about Parks in its fifth series 167 In 2022 the documentary The Rebellious Life of Mrs Rosa Parks was released on Peacock it is the first full length documentary about Parks 168 Also that year a major motion film Bowl Game Armageddon was announced which will spotlight Rosa Parks and Emmett Till leading up to the 1956 Sugar Bowl and Atlanta riots 169 158 Music In March 1999 Parks filed a lawsuit Rosa Parks v LaFace Records against American hip hop duo OutKast and their record company claiming that the duo s song Rosa Parks the most successful radio single of their 1998 album Aquemini had used her name without permission 170 The lawsuit was settled on April 15 2005 six months and nine days before Parks s death OutKast their producer and record labels paid Parks an undisclosed cash settlement They also agreed to work with the Rosa and Raymond Parks Institute to create educational programs about the life of Rosa Parks The record label and OutKast admitted no wrongdoing Responsibility for the payment of legal fees was not disclosed 171 In 2020 rapper Nicki Minaj incorporated Rosa Parks into her song Yikes where she rapped All you bitches Rosa Park uh oh get your ass up in reference to the Montgomery bus boycott 172 173 Other In 1979 the Supersisters trading card set was produced and distributed one of the cards featured Parks s name and picture She is card No 27 in the set 174 In 2019 Mattel released a Barbie doll in Parks s likeness as part of their Inspiring Women series 175 176 See also nbsp United States portal nbsp Indigenous peoples of the Americas portal nbsp Biography portalElizabeth Jennings Graham 1854 sued and won case that led to desegregation of streetcars in New York City Charlotte L Brown desegregated streetcars in San Francisco in the 1860s John Mitchell Jr in 1904 he organized a Black boycott of Richmond Virginia s segregated trolley system Irene Morgan in 1944 sued and won Supreme Court ruling that segregation of interstate buses was unconstitutional Claudette Colvin arrested in March 1955 nine months before Parks arrest for refusing to give up her seat to a white woman on a crowded segregated Montgomery bus Cleveland Court Apartments 620 638 home of Rosa and Raymond Parks and her mother Leona McCauley during the Montgomery bus boycott from 1955 to 1956 Rosa Parks Act 2006 Act approved in the Legislature of the U S state of Alabama to allow those considered law breakers at the time of the Montgomery bus boycott to clear their arrest records of the charge of civil disobedience including Rosa Parks posthumously List of civil rights leaders Timeline of the civil rights movementNotes Ruth Bonner was the daughter of Elijah B Odom of Mississippi an escaped slave who lived through the years of Reconstruction and segregation 157 References Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 106 26 text PDF Retrieved November 13 2011 The quoted passages can be seen by clicking through to the text or PDF An Act of Courage The Arrest Records of Rosa Parks National Archives August 15 2015 Archived from the original on December 5 2020 Retrieved December 1 2020 Gonzalez Juan Goodman 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from the original on April 23 2013 Retrieved February 5 2013 Parks to be honored tonight The Daily Collegian Associated Students of California State University Fresno April 1 1982 Archived from the original on February 4 2020 Retrieved February 4 2020 Uribes Tom March 23 2015 Rosa Parks Awards recognize community engagement Fresno State News Retrieved February 4 2020 Michigan Women s Hall of Fame Hall michiganwomen org Archived from the original on October 10 2014 Retrieved August 13 2012 Candace Award Recipients 1982 1990 National Coalition of 100 Black Women p 3 Archived from the original on March 14 2003 Ashby Ruth Rosa Parks Freedom Rider Sterling Publishing ISBN 978 1 4027 4865 3 Part of I 475 named for Parks Tuscaloosa News September 5 1990 Archived from the original on February 7 2021 Retrieved June 20 2012 List of Award Recipients The Peace Abbey Foundation Archived from the original on August 15 2020 Retrieved May 4 2020 Parks Rosa National Women s Hall of Fame Archived from 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on March 1 2021 Retrieved February 23 2022 Congressional Gold Medal Library of Congress Archived from the original on March 31 2023 Retrieved June 24 2023 1999 State of the Union Address The Washington Post January 28 2000 Archived from the original on February 20 2019 Retrieved February 5 2013 Alabama Puts Rosa Parks In Its Academy Of Honor Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on November 7 2012 Retrieved December 17 2011 Rosa Parks Museum Dedicated During Civil Rights Movement Anniversary Gala in Montgomery Jet December 18 2000 p 8 Retrieved December 17 2011 Cain Tambra K 2004 Parks Rosa Encyclopedia of Women s Health pp 967 969 doi 10 1007 978 0 306 48113 0 323 ISBN 978 0 306 48073 7 Pioneering Members Parks Rosa akapioneers aka1908 com Archived from the original on August 10 2022 Retrieved October 2 2021 Asante Molefi Kete 2002 Rosa Parks 100 Greatest African Americans A Biographical Encyclopedia Amherst New York Prometheus Books ISBN 1 57392 963 8 Civil rights pioneer Rosa Parks to receive Reuther Humanitarian Award from Wayne State University Today Wayne Wayne State University Office of Communications August 2 2002 Archived from the original on March 3 2020 Retrieved January 26 2020 Parks Bus Restored Archived from the original on June 14 2012 Retrieved June 20 2012 MAX station renamed to honor Rosa Parks TriMet February 4 2009 Archived from the original on December 2 2010 Retrieved November 27 2009 TriMet MAX station name honors Rosa Parks Portland Tribune February 3 2009 Archived from the original on June 8 2011 Retrieved February 10 2009 Those Who Have Lain in State or in Honor in the U S Capitol Rotunda Architect of the Capitol September 24 2020 Archived from the original on November 16 2020 Retrieved September 24 2020 Rosa Parks Honored on Metro Bus Fleet King County Metro Online Retrieved July 5 2008 Archived August 14 2009 at the Wayback Machine Burien man charged in hit and run The Seattle Times The Seattle Times Archived from the original on April 5 2023 Retrieved February 23 2022 National Transit Tribute to Rosa Parks Day American Public Transportation Association September 27 2007 Archived from the original on September 27 2007 Retrieved November 13 2011 President Signs H R 4145 to Place Statue of Rosa Parks in U S Capitol White House December 1 2005 Archived from the original on July 15 2009 Retrieved December 4 2005 via National Archives Michigan Memorial Highway Act Excerpt Act 142 of 2001 250 1098 Rosa Parks Memorial Highway Michigan Legislature 2001 Archived from the original on June 11 2007 Retrieved August 18 2006 Rosa Parks birdsofwinter com Archived from the original on April 7 2013 Retrieved February 5 2013 Act 127 Pennsylvania General Assembly 2006 archived from the original on March 31 2018 retrieved March 30 2018 Tennessee Career Center at Metro Center Department of Labor and Workforce Development Archived from the original on January 13 2012 Retrieved December 17 2011 Paula Kasprzyk March 19 2008 State building renamed to honor Rosa Parks Highland Community News Highand Calif Archived from the original on April 23 2019 Retrieved April 23 2019 Randol White March 26 2019 No March Fong Eu Isn t The First Woman To Have A California State Building Named After Her But It Was Close Capital Public Radio California State University Sacramento Archived from the original on March 28 2019 Retrieved April 3 2019 Shea Bill July 9 2009 Detroit s Rosa Parks Transit Center opens Tuesday Crain s Business Detroit Archived from the original on January 11 2010 Retrieved April 18 2010 Neugebauer Cimaron November 15 2012 West Valley City renames street after Rosa Parks The Salt Lake Tribune Archived from the original on November 18 2012 Retrieved November 27 2012 Presidential Proclamation 100th Anniversary of the Birth of Rosa Parks White House February 2013 Archived from the original on January 25 2017 Retrieved February 5 2013 via National Archives a b Observing the 100th Birthday of Rosa Parks Congressional Record 112th Congress 2011 2012 Library of Congress December 19 2012 Archived from the original on March 8 2013 Retrieved February 5 2013 Rosa Parks stamp unveiled for late civil rights icon s 100th birthday CBS News Archived from the original on February 5 2013 Retrieved February 5 2013 Rosa Parks First Statue of African American Female to Grace Capitol ABC News Archived from the original on February 24 2021 Retrieved February 27 2013 a b MPC MPO MPS Archive Minor Planet Center Archived from the original on October 7 2010 Retrieved October 22 2018 284996 Rosaparks 2010 LD58 Minor Planet Center Archived from the original on December 21 2016 Retrieved October 22 2018 Jessica Mazzola October 2 2014 Newark home to state s first Rosa Parks statue officials say nj com Archived from the original on April 20 2023 Retrieved April 20 2023 Rosa Parks Memorial Thomas Jay Warren Sculptor Archived from the original on April 20 2023 Retrieved April 20 2023 Cornish Audie February 7 2015 After years in Lockdown Rosa Parks Papers Head To Library of Congress NPR Archived from the original on February 8 2015 Retrieved February 9 2015 Why Rosa Parks house now stands in Berlin Deutsche Welle Archived from the original on April 10 2017 Retrieved April 10 2017 The Rosa Parks House Project WaterFire Arts Center August 14 2018 Archived from the original on July 5 2018 Retrieved October 21 2018 Givhan Robin May 23 2010 Black Fashion Museum Collection Finds a Fine Home With Smithsonian The Washington Post Archived from the original on November 11 2012 Retrieved January 30 2012 Limbong Andrew August 31 2017 Ruth Bonner Woman Who Helped Open Smithsonian African American Museum Dies NPR Archived from the original on September 1 2017 Retrieved September 1 2017 a b Contrera Jessica September 25 2016 Descended from a slave this family helped to open the African American Museum with Obama The Washington Post Archived from the original on September 6 2017 Retrieved September 1 2017 a b Ouellette Polly April 14 2018 Statue commemorating Rosa Parks unveiled Technique Archived from the original on July 20 2020 Retrieved July 21 2020 Alabama unveils statue of civil rights icon Rosa Parks Richmond Free Press 2019 Archived from the original on December 7 2019 Retrieved December 9 2019 Biden s new look Oval Office is a nod to past US leadership BBC News January 21 2021 Archived from the original on January 22 2021 Retrieved January 22 2021 Litchfield Robyn Bradley March 16 2003 A Mighty achievement The Montgomery Advertiser p 57 Letort Delphine Spring 2012 The Rosa Parks Story The Making of a Civil Rights Icon Black Camera 3 2 31 50 doi 10 2979 blackcamera 3 2 31 JSTOR 10 2979 blackcamera 3 2 31 S2CID 143860156 Barbershop actor to host Image Awards Los Angeles Times Associated Press January 25 2003 Archived from the original on October 15 2012 Retrieved November 13 2011 Rosa Parks boycotts NAACP awards ceremony Recordnet com Associated Press March 9 2003 Archived from the original on November 5 2013 Retrieved November 22 2011 Llewella Gideon British Comedy Guide Archived from the original on August 27 2019 Retrieved August 27 2019 Doctor Who Series 11 Episode 3 Rosa Radio Times Archived from the original on October 11 2018 Retrieved October 11 2018 Rosa Parks I Sat on a Bus CBBC October 7 2014 Retrieved July 5 2023 via YouTube Rosa Parks documentary on Peacock redefines the legend s courageous life Detroit Free Press Archived from the original on March 7 2023 Retrieved February 6 2023 Leflouria Erika Film to focus on Georgia Tech fight against segregation at 1956 Sugar Bowl The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on November 28 2022 Retrieved November 28 2022 Wallinger Hanna 2006 Transitions Race Culture and the Dynamics of Change LIT Verlag Berlin Hamburg Munster p 126 ISBN 3 8258 9531 9 Rosa Parks and Rap Duo Outkast Settle Lawsuit Jet May 2 2005 Archived from the original on March 7 2023 Retrieved October 25 2022 Song Sandra February 7 2020 Nicki Minaj Responds to Rosa Parks Lyrics Criticism Paper Archived from the original on June 26 2020 Retrieved June 24 2020 Saponara Michael Nicki Minaj Slammed For Rosa Parks Reference in Preview of New Song Yikes Billboard Archived from the original on June 17 2020 Retrieved June 24 2020 Wulf Steve March 23 2015 Supersisters Original Roster ESPN Archived from the original on June 5 2015 Retrieved June 4 2015 Caviness Sarah August 27 2019 Barbie launches new Inspiring Women dolls honoring Rosa Parks Sally Ride WJLA 24 7 News Archived from the original on August 27 2019 Retrieved August 27 2019 Macht Daniel Barbie Releases Dolls Honoring Rosa Parks Sally Ride NBC4 Washington Archived from the original on August 29 2019 Retrieved August 29 2019 Further readingBarnes Catherine A Journey from Jim Crow The Desegregation of Southern Transit Columbia University Press 1983 Brinkley Douglas Rosa Parks A Life Penguin Books 2005 ISBN 0 14 303600 9 Morris Aldon Summer 2012 Rosa Parks Strategic Activist sidebar Contexts 11 3 25 doi 10 1177 1536504212456178 Editorial May 17 1974 Two decades later subscription required Archived February 4 2020 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times p 38 Within a year of Brown Rosa Parks a tired seamstress in Montgomery Alabama was like Homer Plessy sixty years earlier arrested for her refusal to move to the back of the bus Parks Rosa with James Haskins Rosa Parks My Story New York Scholastic Inc 1992 ISBN 0 590 46538 4 Theoharis Jeanne The Rebellious Life of Mrs Rosa Parks Beacon Press 2015 ISBN 978 0807076927External linksRosa Parks at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity Rosa Parks Papers Library of Congress Rosa Parks Library and Museum at Troy University The Rosa and Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development Parks article in the Encyclopedia of Alabama Archived December 16 2014 at the Wayback Machine Rosa Parks bus on display at the Henry Ford Museum Teaching and Learning Rosa Parks Rebellious Life Norwood Arlisha Rosa Parks National Women s History Museum 2017 Multimedia and interviews Appearances on C SPAN Civil Rights Icon Rosa Parks Dies National Public Radio Civil Rights Pioneer Rosa Parks 1913 2005 Democracy Now democracynow org Eyes on the Prize Interview with Rosa Parks 1985 11 14 American Archive of Public BroadcastingOthers Complete audio video and newspaper archive of the Montgomery bus boycott Archived December 13 2012 at the Wayback Machine Rosa Parks cadre of working class movement that ended Jim Crow Print media reaction to Parks death in the Newseum archive of front page images from 2005 10 25 Rosa Parks at IMDb Photo of Rosa Parks Childhood Home Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rosa Parks amp oldid 1205957251, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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