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Rosa Parks

Published on Nov 18, 2015

Rosa Parks, Civil Rights Activist

PRESENTATION OUTLINE

Rosa Parks

Civil Rights Activist

childhood

  • Rosa Louise McCauley was born on February 4, 1913 in Tuskegee, Alabama.
  • Her younger brother, Sylvester, was born on August 20, 1915.
  • She was a small, sickly, delicate, child who grew up with tonsillitis.
  • She later had her tonsils removed to improve her health.
  • She talked back or gave white kids an attitude when she was threatened.
Photo by Yan Boechat

Early years

  • Her parents were Leona Edwards and James McCauley.
  • Her mother was a teacher and her father was a carpenter.
  • Her parents separated e they had two different ways to live.
  • Leona took the children to the Edward's Farm in Pine Level, Alabama.
  • Rosa learned about racism, segregation, and slavery from her grandparents.

Schooling

  • Rosa attended school in Pine Level, but her mother was also her teacher.
  • She went to Miss White's School for Girls (private), created by northern  
  • Rosa went to a laboratory school at Alabama State Teacher's College.
  • She had to quit school twice to take care of her ill mother and grandmother
  • Her grandmother died shortly after and didn't finish high school.

other

  • Rosa, 20 married Raymond Parks, 29, a barber on December 18, 1932.
  • She went back to school and earned her high school diploma.
  • Only 7% of African Americans earned a high school diploma.
  • She tried voting twice and was denied, but accepted on her third try.

NAACP

  • The National Association for the Advanced Placement of Colored People
  • The NAACP tried to prove justice for innocent African Americans.
  • Rosa first worked as a secretary, then as an adviser for the Youth Council.
  • She was in charge of keeping track of unjust crime cases and their evidence
  • Her husband was longtime member of the NAACP and inspired her to join.
Photo by purpleslog

December 1, 1955

  • Rosa boarded the bus after a day of work
  • She sat in the front seats of the colored section and the bus became full.
  • One male white passenger was left standing, driver told people to get off.
  • 3 out of the 4 people got off the bus, Rosa didn't move or budge.
  • The driver called the police and was arrested for breaking Alabama law.
Photo by Chris Green

Activism

  • Rosa's refusal to let a white passenger sit down, sparked the Bus Boycott.
  • The Boycott was a 381 protest against segregation on Montgomery buses.
  • US Supreme Court Decision: Segregation on buses was unconstitutional.
  • Participated in the Civil Rights Movement causing her to lose her job.
  • Moved to Detroit and works for US Representative, John Conyer for 23 years 

Later years

  • Rosa's husband, 74 and brother, 62 died in 1977 due to cancer.
  • Her mother died in 1979 at the age of 92 due to cancer.
  • Rosa and Raymond Parks Institute for Self-Development.
  • Rosa Parks and Elaine Steele founded it
  • Gives teenagers bus tours to learn about Civil Rights.

Death and medals

  • She died on October 24, 2005 of natural causes at the age of 92.
  • Inducted in the Michigan Hall of Fame
  • Spingarn Medal, NAACP's highest honor
  •  Martin Luther King Jr. award, Peace Abbey Courage of Conscience Award
  • Presidential Medal of Freedom, highest award given to American Citizens.
Photo by Mike Saechang

"each Person must live their life

 AS A MODEL FOR OTHERS."
Photo by SweetOnVeg

"yOU MUST NEVER BE FEARFUL ABOUT

WHAT YOU ARE DOING WHEN IT IS RIGHT."
Photo by aussiegall