she didn't give up her seat on a bus.
she was arrested for not moving for a white guy on a bus in America a long time ago
she was working as a seam stress at the time she got arrested
No. No one knew at the time that it would be such a big deal.
yes, she did Rosa parks was a very influencial person she was also the catalyst (starter or cause) of the bus boycott during the time she was arrested for not giving up her seat.
Rosa Parks was arrested on the bus when she was 42 when she wouldn't give up her front row seat to a "white" man, which seems pretty ridiculous that she was arrested because she sat in a front row seat the laws were extremely ignorant and unnecessary back then.
She never mention that as a matter of fact but she seemed not afraid of her actions. Rosa Parks on December 1, 1955, when a white passenger entered an already full bus, the bus driver asked Rosa Parks and three other African-Americans sitting in her row, to stand up. The others stood up; Rosa Parks remained seated. Rosa Parks was arrested because of that action. After that Rosa became famous. That action of Rosa Park became an example to all black Americans in a time when they were looking for equal rights. A bus boycott began and it worked. The blow was lethal. Since the rest of the civil rights movement stemmed from what became known as the Montgomery Bus Boycott, Rosa Parks is known as the Mother of the Civil Rights Movement.
It was late afternoon because she just got off work. She was arrested, put in handcuffs, and fined 5.00.
What was in Rosa Park's way was that black skinned colored people had to sit in the back of the bus. She got arrested for the time she sat in the front and refused to give her seat up to a white man.
Slavery had been abolished for 100 years by the time Rosa Parks lived.
Rosa Parks enjoyed sewing in her spare time anything else I don't know but please inform us.
Rosa Parks had several jobs including a domestic worker, housekeeper, seamstress, hospital aide, and secretary. At the time that Rosa Parks was arrested for refusing to give up her seat on the bus in December 1955, she was a seamstress in a Montgomery, Alabama department store. As a result of her arrest and her activities in the protest movement that followed, Rosa lost her seamstress job and found it very difficult to find employment.
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