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The Montgomery Bus Boycott Of 1955-56

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The Montgomery Bus Boycott of 1955-56 was triggered when Rosa Parks refused to give up her bus seat to a white man in the city of Montgomery, Alabama, on December 1st, 1955. The event saw that around 95% of Montgomery’s black citizens refused to ride the bus, lasting 381 days. This was an extremely important event as this is identified as the beginning of the American Black Civil Rights movement. I will be discussing the causes of this event - the Jim Crow laws, Rosas refusal to move, and the support of the NAACP - as well as the consequences; the suffering of Rosa and Raymond and their supporters, Negro economic power and Martin Luther King Jr. emerging as a civil rights leader. A key cause of the Montgomery Bus Boycott (MBB) was the …show more content…

Another key cause of the Montgomery Bus Boycott was Rosa Park’s refusal to move from her bus seat, after being told to move for a white person. On December 1st, 1985, after coming home from work, Rosa sat in the black section of the bus, and was ushered to leave her seat when a white man boarded. This was a result of there being no white seats available at the time. Rosa had already skipped the first bus that had passed her, as she saw it was full, and she had no energy in her to stand. When she was told to move, Rosa argued that she was too tired after her full day of work, and refused to get up. Later, Rosa stated that her real reasoning for not moving was because she was tired of the lack of equality in Montgomery. The police were called after Rosa repeatedly told the bus driver she would not move, and Rosa was arrested that night, and thrown into jail. She was fined $10, as well as $4 for court fees. Ed Nixon, who was the head of the Montgomery NAACP, bailed her out, and they then drew attention to her case. Her arrest sparked an uproar in the black community of Montgomery, and this was incentive for the decision that they needed a solution to end this discrimination, and got involved with the boycott they had planned. Although two other woman, Mary Louise Smith and

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