Essay On The Bus Boycott

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The bus boycott succeed because the black people stood up for what they thought was right, they did not use violence, they did not fight back, they fought smart, and they fought right. See many of the white people abuse the power that they had by making the blacks give up their seats after long days of work, and making them go to the back of the store to purchase food and other items. They treated them different because they didn’t have the same skin tone, but little did they know that on December 1st 1955 everything was about to change; one day on the bus ride home when Rosa Parks decided that she was not going to stand and let a young white man have her seat after a long day at work, she was arrested. December 5th 1955 is when the bus boycott …show more content…

They knew that if they just held out that everything would be okay and that King would get them through it. All they needed was faith and patients. They knew that King would one day bring them out of the horrible hole that they had been put in, they knew that one day everyone would be able to eat in the same place, and they wouldn’t have to go to the back of the store if they wanted to buy something, they just had to trust in King, and that’s what they did. August 28, 1963 King gave his “I have a dream speech” this gave everyone hope and in 1964 they got their rights. Blacks were finally treated the same as white people, they were able to do the things that they could only dream of before. They could go to the same schools, and eat in the same places, everything was finally the equal. The reason the bus boycott succeed was because over half the bus riders were colored and when they stopped riding the bus the lost over half their money so they had to shut the busses down. Everything that everyone had been fighting for had finally happen, dreams finally came true, people were now equal no matter what color skin color they

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