Rosa Parks
The Lady Said “No”
By Anne Adams
When I was
fourteen in 1959, my family traveled
cross-country from our home in Ohio. We
stopped in Dallas and while there we went
ate lunch and went shopping in a downtown
Woolworth’s. After lunch when my father
indicated he wanted to show me something. He
took me downstairs to the basement part of
the store and with no comment pointed out
what seemed to be a duplicate lunch counter
to the one upstairs. The only difference I
could see was that the customers were all
black or “Negro,” as we said then. After a
glance, I resumed my shopping, but only
later did I realize that he was showing me
racial segregation. Since our small town at
that time had almost no black residents it
was not an issue there. Yet in places like
Dallas, and other southern cities like
Montgomery, Alabama it was, and especially
on city buses. That is, until in December,
1955 a department store seamstress named
Rosa Parks said “no” – and refused to give
up her seat on a Montgomery city bus to
white riders.
“People
always say I didn’t give up my seat because
I was tired,” she said later, “But that
isn’t true…No, the only tired I was, was
tired of giving in.” And because she did, it
had immediate national effects. As one
source put it: “Parks’ act of defiance
became an important symbol of the modern
Civil Rights Movement and she became an
international icon of resistance to racial
segregation.”
The lady
Congress later called the “Mother of the
Modern-Day Civil Rights Movement” was born
Rosa Louise McCauley in Tuskegee, Alabama in
February, 1913, the daughter of a carpenter
and a teacher. Actually she claimed not
just African ancestry but also
Cherokee-Creek and her great grandfather was
Scots-Irish. At her parents’ separation,
Rosa moved with her mother to a community
near Montgomery, and she grew up there on a
family farm. After learning at home till she
was 11, she then attended several schools
until she had to drop out to care for family
members.
Under the “Jim
Crow” laws of the time in the south, blacks
and whites occupied totally separate spaces
– and different worlds. Public
transportation, such as buses and trains did
not offer separate vehicles, but instead set
up separate seating areas for the races. Of
course there were no school buses for black
children. Mrs. Parks recalled later that
she became quite accustomed to seeing buses
carry white children to class – while she
walked. “The bus was among the first ways I
realized there was a black world and a white
world.”
In 1932 Rosa
married Raymond Parks, a Montgomery barber
and she took a variety of jobs working in
domestic service and as a hospital aide.
Also, her husband encouraged her to finish
her high school education in a time when
very few black people achieved this. Raymond
was active in the local NAACP (National
Association for the Advancement of Colored
People) and in late 1943 Rosa joined the
Montgomery chapter, becoming secretary to
the president, a position she continued till
1957.
About 1944
when she worked at a local air force base
she encountered equal accommodations for the
first time. Remembering what it was like to
ride on an integrated trolley, she later
remarked: “You might say Maxwell [the air
base] opened my eyes up.” Then when she
went to work as a housekeeper and seamstress
for a prominent white couple, they
encouraged her to continue her education and
update her learning experiences.
Racial
segregation of buses had long been a public
issue and in fact the Interstate Commerce
Commission had banned discrimination on
interstate buses. However, that did not
affect buses that operated within state
lines. To challenge that discrepancy in
court, civil rights advocates needed to find
a plaintiff for a challenge, yet they knew
they had to find a person who could project
the same right image for their cause. They
soon discovered the right person – there
within their own organization.
On Montgomery
city buses the first four rows were reserved
for whites, and the rest of the rows were
designated as “colored” – even though blacks
made up more than 75% of the ridership. The
size of the sections depended on the number
of riders of each race and often the driver
used a “colored” placard to indicate the
first row of the black section. The
procedure was that as more white riders
boarded and needed more than the first four
rows, black riders had to move further back
or even stand or sometimes leave the bus.
When a black rider boarded to find the
whites occupied most of the front seats, he
or she had to get off, and come back on
through the rear door. However, once they
got off, the driver might pull away and
leave them, even though they’d paid their
fare.
Understandably, the black community decried
the unfairness of the system, but there
seemed to be no recourse. Until December 1,
1955.
About 6 p.m.
on that day Mrs. Parks left her job as a
seamstress in a downtown store, and boarded
the bus, sitting in an empty seat in the
first row of the “colored” section behind
the area reserved for white riders. However,
as more whites got on, the driver moved the
“colored” sign to the row behind Mrs. Parks.
He demanded she and four other blacks give
up their seats to whites, and move toward
the rear. As Mrs. Parks said later: “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.”
Though three
of the other black riders complied with the
order, Mrs. Parks did not move. Later she
recounted what happened: “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.’”
A police
officer arrived to arrest her and charge her
with a violation of the city’s segregation
law. Supporters, including the NAACP
president, and her former employer, a local
white attorney, arranged for her to bail out
that evening. Then the civil rights
advocates decided to be proactive and stage
a bus boycott by black riders. They formed
the Montgomery Improvement Association, and
as their president elected a newcomer to
Montgomery, the pastor of Dexter Avenue
Baptist Church, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Then on
December 5 as Mrs. Parks was tried on the
charges of disorderly conduct and found
guilty, and fined $10, the bus boycott
began. From the first day, black citizens
avoided the bus system. Some rode in
black-owned cabs that charged the same as
the bus fare, some carpooled, but many
walked, sometimes long distances. As the
boycott continued, city buses remained idle
and company profits dwindled. Also, the
boycott brought repercussions as black
churches were bombed and burned, as were the
homes of many supporters of both races. As
it turned out, Mrs. Parks’ case could not be
the basis of a federal suit against bus
segregation because hers was a criminal case
and a ruling in her favor would only negate
her conviction and not affect the
segregation laws. However, there were other
plaintiffs available and in November, 1956
in response to a challenge, the U.S. Supreme
Court decreed intrastate bus segregation to
be unconstitutional. The Montgomery bus
boycott ended the next day.
Though Mrs.
Parks had become a national figure, she
still encountered difficulties. After she
was dismissed from her position at the
store, her husband also left his job and in
1957 they moved to Virginia and later to
Detroit where she again worked as a
seamstress. Then in 1965 she joined the
staff of a local black congressman and
worked there till she retired in 1988.
Mrs. Parks
died in October, 2005 a year after being
diagnosed with dementia, and in her memory
the cities of Montgomery and Detroit
arranged to have the front seats on their
buses reserved with black ribbons. After a
memorial service was held in a Montgomery
church her casket was then flown to
Washington and transported in a city bus to
lay in state in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda.
After another “lying in state” in Detroit,
and another multi-hour funeral she was laid
to rest in a family tomb.
Historians may
sometimes wonder if the Civil Rights
Movement would have taken place if Mrs.
Parks had agreed to give up her seat on the
Montgomery bus, but Dr. King himself
recognized Mrs. Parks’ refusal not as the
cause of the beginning of the Civil Rights
movement, but one major factor. “The cause
lay deep in the record of similar
injustices,” he said. “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.’”
Anne
Adams, who resides in Houston, Texas,
has been a freelance writer for more
than thirty years, publishing in both
secular and Christian publications. She
has published two books: Brittany
Child of Joy (Broadman - 1986) and
First of All, a Wife: Sketches of
American First Ladies (pcpublications.org-
2007). |
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