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The Montgomery Bus Boycott, 1955

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Rosa Parks was a seamstress and secretary for the NACCP ... Go to http://www.archives.state.al.us/teacher/rights/rights1.html and answer the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Montgomery Bus Boycott, 1955


1
The Montgomery Bus Boycott, 1955
2
What was the Montgomery bus boycott?
  • The Montgomery Bus Boycott was a political and
    social protest campaign started in 1955 in
    Montgomery, Alabama
  • Aim to oppose the racial segregation on the buses

3
Segregation on the buses
  • Although 75 of the riders on the bus were negro
    they were expected to sit at the back and when
    the bus was full they were also expected to stand
    to let the white person sit

The bus on which Rosa Parks rode
4
Segregation on the buses
  • They were often insulted by bus operators
    referring to Blacks as black apes
  • Blacks had to pay at the front of the bus and
    then get back off to enter at the back- often the
    bus rode away without them

5
Why did the protest begin?
  • Rosa Parks was a seamstress and secretary for the
    NACCP
  • After work she got on a bus and sat at the black
    section at the back (1st December)
  • As the bus filled up she was asked to stand to
    allow white passengers to sit down
  • She refused and was arrested

I cant take it no longer Rosa Parks
  • http//www.historychannel.com/broadband/clipview/i
    ndex.jsp?idtdih_1201

6
The protest begins
  • Her trial was set for Monday 5th of December
  • 50 Black leaders met in Montgomery Church to
    discuss their plans
  • They decided to boycott the city bus system to
    make it clear to whites that they would not
    accept this type of treatment any longer

7
The protest begins
  • The committee prepared a statement asking people
  • Not to ride the buses but to take a cab, share a
    ride or walk
  • their concern was not to put the bus company out
    of business but to put justice in business

8
we can no longer lend our cooperation to an evil
system
  • On the first morning the buses usually filled
    with black passengers were empty
  • Parks lost her case and was convicted of
    violating the segregated seating laws
  • black leaders met again to organize an extension
    of the bus boycott.

9
Martin Luther King
  • the Montgomery Improvement Association (MIA)was
    formed and elected King as its president.
  • "There comes a time when people get tired of
    being trampled over by the iron feet of
    oppression. King

10
Effects of the Boycott
  • After 381 days of taking taxis, carpooling, and
    walking the hostile streets of Montgomery
  • African Americans eventually won their fight to
    desegregate seating on public buses, not only in
    Montgomery, but throughout the United States
    (1956)

11
Effects of the Boycott
  • The bus companies could no longer afford to lose
    Black passengers
  • This showed the economic power of Blacks
  • Montgomery was however still a segregated town

12
Effects of the Boycott
  • The bus boycott had shown Blacks what they could
    achieve through organised peaceful protests
  • MLK and Rev. Abernathy became the leaders of the
    new civil rights movement
  • Southern Christian Leadership conference (SCLC)
    was set up in 1957

13
Activity
  • Go to http//www.archives.state.al.us/teacher/righ
    ts/rights1.html and answer the following
    questions
  • Describe the Montgomery bus boycott (4)
  • Why was the Montgomery Bus boycott of 1955 so
    important? (5)
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