no
Yes. She rode the bus to and from work. Every single day.
she rode her bike but not around the neighbor hood.
Rosa parks riders
Rosa Parks enjoyed sewing. She loves her husband, Raymond Parks, and animals.
Rosa Parks was born on 1913.She died in 2005 she died when she was 92 years old.One day she was in a bus and she demanded to sit in the front of the bus. In 1932 Rosa Parks married a guy.
WHAT ARE U TALKING ABOUT?! Rosa parks got kicked off a bus! Harriet didn't even ride the bus! she rode the train! She didn't ride the train she walked
If Rosa Parks had not rode the bus on December 1, 1955, the day she was arrested, it would have been another day. Rosa Parks was a seamstress at a department store and rode the bus home every day. On that December 1st, she was on her way home from work. When the seats in the 'white section' were full and more white people got on the bus, the driver asked her to give up her seat to a white man who was standing. She had been dealing with this treatment for a long time and decided that day to refuse to comply, she was tired of being treated as second class. She worked all day the same as everyone else and paid her fare the same as everyone else. She had just had enough. If wasn't the first time she had been put off the bus for refusal to comply, it happened to be this time that the driver called a policeman to arrest her.
The bus Rosa Parks rode is now on display at the Henry Ford Museum in Detroit, Michigan. Rosa Parks rode the Cleveland Avenue bus, as she always did when commuting to and from her job at the Montgomery Fair store. The Cleveland Avenue bus was part of the Montgomery City Bus Lines, owned by National Bus Lines of Chicago, IL. Employees remembered the coach ID, 2857, was stenciled above the window on the driver's right, and were able to identify the exact bus Parks was riding when arrested. The bus was manufactured by GM in 1948 and remained in service until 1971. It was later salvaged from a field and purchased by the Henry Ford Museum in Detroit. For more information, see Related Links and Questions, below.
Rosa Parks rode the Cleveland Avenue bus, as she always did when commuting to and from her job at the Montgomery Fair store.The Cleveland Avenue bus was part of the Montgomery City Bus Lines, owned by National Bus Lines of Chicago, IL. Employees remembered the coach ID, 2857, was stenciled above the window on the driver's right, and were able to identify the exact bus Parks was riding when arrested. The bus was manufactured by GM in 1948 and remained in service until 1971. It was later salvaged from a field and purchased by the Henry Ford Museum in Detroit.See Related Links, below, for a picture of the bus.
Rosa Parks was a maid that was on her way home. She rode the bus. At the time that she commuted to and from work it was law that the bus company and driver could require people to sit in certain parts of the bus. African Americans were required to sit in the back of the bus. This part of the bus had less ventilation and the seats were not maintained. Rosa Parks was so tired that she took the first seat available in the front of the bus and refused to move when asked. Because she did this it started a boycott of the bus system and a turn around for laws that discriminated against a person because of ethnicity. Surprisingly, there were laws still on the books that discriminated because of race in the 1990's.
Theodore Roosevelt rode in The Plunger.
The group rode the first ten miles in one hour."Rode" is the predicate