rosa parks (page 168). feb. 13, 1913 - oct. 25, 2005 born in tuskegee, alabama known as the...

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Rosa Parks (page 168)

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Page 1: Rosa Parks (page 168).  Feb. 13, 1913 - Oct. 25, 2005  Born in Tuskegee, Alabama  Known as the “mother of the modern Civil Rights Movement.”  In 1955,

Rosa Parks(page 168)

Page 2: Rosa Parks (page 168).  Feb. 13, 1913 - Oct. 25, 2005  Born in Tuskegee, Alabama  Known as the “mother of the modern Civil Rights Movement.”  In 1955,

Feb. 13, 1913 - Oct. 25, 2005 Born in Tuskegee, Alabama Known as the “mother of the modern Civil Rights

Movement.” In 1955, in Montgomery, Alabama - arrested for

breaking an unfair law– she refused to give up her seat on a public bus to a white man

Incited a boycott that led to the end of segregation on the Montgomery bus system

Her courageous act marked the beginning of the Civil Rights Movement

In 1999, she was granted Congressional Gold Medal (highest honor given to a US civilian)

Page 3: Rosa Parks (page 168).  Feb. 13, 1913 - Oct. 25, 2005  Born in Tuskegee, Alabama  Known as the “mother of the modern Civil Rights Movement.”  In 1955,

In Montgomery, Alabama, where Parks lived, the bus system reserved the first four rows for white riders.

75 percent of the ridership was made up of black riders.

On December 1, 1955 at about 6 p.m., Parks went on the bus and sat on the first row of seats reserved for black people.

As the bus travelled, seats reserved for whites filled up. Some were forced to stand.

The bus driver, James F. Blake, demanded that Parks and other riders sitting in the first sections move.

Parks refused and Blake had her arrested.

Page 4: Rosa Parks (page 168).  Feb. 13, 1913 - Oct. 25, 2005  Born in Tuskegee, Alabama  Known as the “mother of the modern Civil Rights Movement.”  In 1955,

Blacks boycott the Montgomery Bus system

Black cab drivers took blacks to work for $.10 per ride, while others organized carpools.

Boycotts follow in bus systems across the country.

The boycott ended on December 20, 1956 (381 days)

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled Alabama’s bus segregation unconstitutional.

The Federal Interstate Commerce Commission bans segregation on interstate trains and buses.

Page 5: Rosa Parks (page 168).  Feb. 13, 1913 - Oct. 25, 2005  Born in Tuskegee, Alabama  Known as the “mother of the modern Civil Rights Movement.”  In 1955,

This work is defined by which “type” of nonfiction?

What is Parks’ purpose in writing her story?

What is her childhood memory of her grandfather?

How does this memory affect her action that day on the bus many years later?

What kind of “tired” was she? Why does she explain this to the reader?

Page 6: Rosa Parks (page 168).  Feb. 13, 1913 - Oct. 25, 2005  Born in Tuskegee, Alabama  Known as the “mother of the modern Civil Rights Movement.”  In 1955,

This work is defined by which “type” of nonfiction?

autobiography What is Parks’ purpose in writing her

autobiography? To increase the awareness and understanding of the

struggles of African Americans What is her childhood memory of her grandfather? She remembers her grandfather carrying a gun to

protect himself and his family. How does this memory affect her action that day

on the bus many years later? She knew it was wrong for her grandfather to

always have been afraid– she didn’t want to be afraid anymore.

Page 7: Rosa Parks (page 168).  Feb. 13, 1913 - Oct. 25, 2005  Born in Tuskegee, Alabama  Known as the “mother of the modern Civil Rights Movement.”  In 1955,

“What kind of tired” was she? “tired of giving in” into the fear and

oppression Why does she explain this to the reader? She wants people to know why she

refused to give up her seat– NOT because she was physically tired or elderly…