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Related: About this forumToday, Dec 5, Is the 66th Anniversary of The Montgomery Bus Boycott
From the Zinn Education Project:
Out of Montgomerys 50,000 African American residents, 30,000-40,000 participated in the boycott. For 381 days, they walked or bicycled or car-pooled, depriving the bus company of a substantial portion of its revenue.
In order to maintain the boycott, the Montgomery Improvement Association was born. The MIA created an elaborate carpool system, designating 40 pickup stations across town where people could go to get a ride. Police and local whites constantly harassed the car pool with tickets and violence. But the community pressed on.
One of the tactics the city used to try to derail the boycott was to dredge up an old law prohibiting organized boycotts. Hoping to break the carpool system and criminalize its leaders , at the end of February 1956, the city indicted 89 boycott leaders including Parks. As a show of power and support, many boycott organizers, including Parks and Nixon, chose to turn themselves in. . . .
Even after the boycotts successful end, Rosa and Raymond Parks still couldnt find work [they had both lost their jobs about five weeks into the boycott] and the family continued to get death threats.
It is important for students to know that the Montgomery Bus Boycott was a demand for much more than desegregation, as described here by Danielle McGuire in More Than a Seat on the Bus.
In truth, the Montgomery Bus Boycott was a protest against racial and sexual violence, and Rosa Parkss arrest on December 1, 1955 was but one act in a life devoted to the protection and defense of Black people generally, and Black women specifically. Indeed, the bus boycott was, in many ways, the precursor to the #SayHerName twitter campaigns designed to remind us that the lives of Black women matter.
In 1997, an interviewer asked Joe Azbell, former city editor of the Montgomery Advertiser, who was the most important person in the bus boycott. Surprisingly, he did not say Rosa Parks. Gertrude Perkins, he said, is not even mentioned in the history books, but she had as much to do with the bus boycott as anyone on earth. On March 27, 1949, Perkins was on her way home from a party when two white Montgomery police officers arrested her for public drunkenness. They pushed her into the backseat of their patrol car, drove to a railroad embankment, dragged her behind a building, and raped her at gunpoint.
Left alone on the roadside, Perkins somehow mustered the courage to report the crime. She went directly to the Holt Street Baptist Church parsonage and woke Reverend Solomon A. Seay Sr., an outspoken minister in Montgomery. We didnt go to bed that morning, he recalled. I kept her at my house, carefully wrote down what she said and later had it notarized. The next day, Seay escorted Perkins to the police station. City authorities called Perkinss claim completely false and refused to hold a line-up or issue any warrants since, according to the mayor, it would violate the Constitutional rights of the police. Besides, he said, my policemen would not do a thing like that.
But African Americans knew better. What happened to Gertrude Perkins was no isolated incident. Montgomerys police force had a reputation for racist and sexist brutality that went back years, and Black leaders in the city were tired of it. When the authorities made clear that they would not respond to Perkinss claims, local NAACP activists, labor leaders, and ministers formed an umbrella organization called the Citizens Committee for Gertrude Perkins. Rosa Parks was one of the local activists who demanded an investigation and trial, and helped maintain public protests that lasted for two months.
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Today, Dec 5, Is the 66th Anniversary of The Montgomery Bus Boycott (Original Post)
ancianita
Dec 2021
OP
And I'm currently watching the 1978 film "King," with Paul Winfield, on TV
Rhiannon12866
Dec 2021
#2
I was very impressed, thought it was an excellent movie, I believed that Paul Winfield was Dr. King
Rhiannon12866
Dec 2021
#4
appalachiablue
(41,153 posts)1. We need to respect and remember
the major protest against racial discrimination and violence by courageous people like Rosa Parks and many others involved in the Montgomery, AL boycott. I had never heard the tragic story of Gertrude Perkins and the brutality and injustice done to her. I'm glad that the Zinn Project included it in this history.
Rhiannon12866
(205,664 posts)2. And I'm currently watching the 1978 film "King," with Paul Winfield, on TV
Very timely and well worth the watch.
ancianita
(36,110 posts)3. I've got a house in project mode but will definitely
watch that when asap later this week.
Rhiannon12866
(205,664 posts)4. I was very impressed, thought it was an excellent movie, I believed that Paul Winfield was Dr. King
I thought the acting was excellent and it was a very moving portrayal of events. I highly recommend it, though the ending was understandably heart wrenching.