The African-Americans that lived in Montgomery, Alabama staged a nonviolent protest in the form of a boycott of the Montgomery Bus System. As a result of this nonviolent protest (and the US Supreme Court decision Browder v. Gayle, (1956)), African-Americans were allowed to sit anywhere they wanted on a bus. This effort was a great victory for Dr. Martin Luther King's philosophy of nonviolent protest to change the norms of society that had existed in the South.
The name of the bus boycott was the Montgomery Bus Boycott.
Yes the Montgomery bus boycott did achieve its goals .
No, the Montgomery Bus Boycott was not in the 19th century. It was in the 20th century.
The Montgomery bus boycott
no not no
Rosa Park sparked the Montgomery bus boycott by sitting at the front of a bus in violation of local laws in 1955.
Dr. King was 26 years old when he led the Montgomery bus boycott.
Rosa Park sparked the Montgomery bus boycott by sitting at the front of a bus in violation of local laws in 1955.
Yes, there are people from the Montgomery Bus Boycott who are still alive. Most of them are likely in their 70s or 80s.
no, the Montgomery Bus Boycott was commenced before the browder v gayle case.
The Montgomery bus boycott
Rosa Parks boycott was named the Montgomery Bus Boycott.