Monday, May 26, 2014

Rosa Parks Refuses to Leave Her Bus Seat

On December 1, 1955, Rosa Parks, a 42-year-old African-American seamstress, refused to give up her seat to a white man while riding on a city bus in Montgomery, Alabama. For doing this, Rosa Parks was arrested and fined for breaking the laws of segregation. Rosa Parks' refusal to leave her seat sparked the Montgomery Bus Boycott and is considered the beginning of the modern Civil Rights Movement.

Alabama in the 1950's was known for its segregation laws. In addition to separate drinking fountains, bathrooms, and schools for African-Americans and whites, there were separate rules regarding seating on city buses. African-Americans living in montgomery were used to dealing with the segregation rules, but the unfair policies on city buses were especially harsh. The first rows of seats were reserved for whites only; while African-Americans, who paid the same ten cent fare as the whites, were required to find seats in the back. If all the seats were taken but another white passenger boarded the bus, then a row of African-American passengers sitting in the middle of the bus would be required to give up their seats, even if it meant they would have to stand. It wasn't unusual for bus drivers to drive off before they could get on the bus. The African-American passengers had to deal with this treatment going to work and home from work everyday; even though they were the ones who made up the majority of bus passengers. It was time for a change. 

 


On the particular day that Rosa Parks refused to get out of her seat, she happened to sit down right behind the row reserved for whites. At the next stop when white passengers got on the bus and roughly ordered Parks to move, she simply refused. Only one white passenger needed a seat, but she "needed" to move because a white person living in the segregated South would not sit in the same row as an African American.

The driver ended up calling the police and Parks was arrested. She was released later that night. News of her arrest led to a 381 day boycott, now called the Montgomery Bus Boycott. It ended when the Supreme Court ruled that the bus segregation laws in Alabama were unconstitutional. 

Rosa Parks was the beginning of the future of equality for African-Americans and whites. In the words of Parks herself, "The only tired I was, was tired of giving in."

Sources:
1) http://www.achievement.org/autodoc/page/par0bio-1
2) http://www.thehenryford.org/exhibits/rosaparks/story.asp
3) http://teacher.scholastic.com/rosa/


Monday, May 12, 2014

13-1 Comprehension Questions

Comprehension questions, Chapter 13-1
Write on paper, or on blog.

What was the goal for Roosevelt after the war?  What were Soviet goals about Germany?

What did FDR think was 'key' to world peace? Trading between countries.

What was 'declaration of liberated europe, and how successful was it?' The Yalta Conference, world war II meeting of the head of governments of the US, Soviet Union and United Nations. Wasn't very successful or effective.

How was Germany to be controlled? Germany and Berlin were to be split into four occupied zones.

What was Truman's view about how to deal with USSR? He decided to deal with the communists in a tougher manner than Roosevelt had and believed this was the only way to deal with them.

What is a satellite nation? A nation that is dominated politically by another. 
The Warsaw Pact nations, other than the former Soviet Union itself, were commonly called satellites of the Soviet Union.

What is an 'iron curtain': The national barrier separating the former Soviet bloc and the West prior to the decline of communism.