Rosa Parks’
case goes to trial. More than 5,000 people pack Holt Street Baptist
Church and pass a resolution to continue the boycott..
Montgomery citizens
petition the city of Montgomery to open a jitney line of station
wagons capable of carrying eight passengers for a low fare. No action
reflected in the Montgomery City Commission minutes.
1956
As the boycott continues, the Montgomery City Commission doubles
bus fares to 20 cents; children’s fares raised to 10 cents.
The Rev. Martin
Luther King Jr.’s home is bombed. Montgomery City Commission
issues $500 reward in connection with bombing.
Attorney Fred
Gray files lawsuit against segregation in federal court.
Three federal
judges vote 2-1 to strike down Montgomery bus segregation ordinances
as unconstitutional.
U.S. Supreme
Court rules that segregation of city buses is unconstitutional.
Federal injunctions
are served on the city, enforcing the Court’s ruling on public
transportation.
Black Montgomerians
drop the boycott of the bus system.
1957
Parks and her husband move to Detroit, Mich.
1963
About 250,000 people join the March on Washington. Congregating
at the Lincoln Memorial, participants listen as the Rev. Martin
Luther King Jr. delivers his famous “I Have a Dream”
speech. Rosa Parks joins in the March on Washington..
1965
Parks begins working in the office of Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich.
After serving as an administrative assistant more than 20 years,
she retired in 1988. Parks worked with Conyers on creating a holiday
to honor the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
1979
Rosa Parks receives prestigious Spingarn Award, the NAACP’s
highest honor for civil rights contributions. Also, Parks’
mother, Leona McCauley, dies.
1992
Parks publishes her first book, “Rosa Parks: My Story”
(New York: Dial Books) with Jim Haskins
1994
Parks’ memoir, “Quiet Strength,” is published.
Parks takes a trip to Japan; receives honorary doctorate degree/Soka
University; travels to Stockholm, Sweden, to receive Rosa Parks
Peace Prize and to light the Peace Candle.
Parks is attacked
and beaten in her Detroit home by an African-American man who wanted
money and apparently did not recognize her. She wrote after the
incident, “I pray for this young man and the conditions in
our country that have made him this way.”
1996
Rosa Parks receives the highest U.S. civilian honor, the Presidential
Medal of Freedom.
1998
Groundbreaking for Troy State University Montgomery’s Rosa
Parks Museum and Library.
1999
Parks receives the Congressional Gold Medal of Honor from a bill
widely supported by both houses of Congress.
2000
Dedication and grand opening of Troy State University Montgomery’s
Rosa Parks Museum and Library.
2005
Lawyers for Rosa Parks settle a lawsuit against rap duo Outkast.
October 24, 2005
Rosa Parks dies in Detroit at age 92.