Rosa Parks
From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rosa Louise McCauley Parks is an African-American seamstress and civil rights activist. She was called the "Mother of the Modern-Day Civil Rights Movement ". She was born on February 4, 1913 and died October 24, 2005.
Parks is most famous for what she did on December 1, 1955. While she sat in a seat at the front of a bus, the bus driver told her to move to the back of the bus so a white passenger could take the seat in the front of the bus. Parks refused to move. She was tired of being treated as a lower class person because of the colour of her skin. She was arrested. This lead to the Montgomery bus boycott. After that, black people could sit wherever they wanted to on the bus. Her refusing to let others treat her differently was an important symbol in the fight for equal rights.
[edit] External links
- Academy of Achievement Profile
- Rosa Parks Library and Museum at Troy University
- The Rosa and Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development
- Civil Rights Icon Rosa Parks Dies - National Public Radio
- Complete audio/video and newspaper archive of the Montgomery Bus Boycott
- Rose Parks Biography
- Rosa Parks Quotes
- Rosa Parks interview and photographs