Stuff You Should Know - Rosa Parks: Agent of Change
Episode Date: February 22, 2018Rosa Parks finishes out our Black History Month episodes in grand fashion. While most know her from that fateful day on the Montgomery city bus, she actually had a long life as an advocate, protestor ...and agent of change. Join us today as we celebrate one of America's great history makers. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
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Hey everybody, we've already made our big tour announcement
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Nice, yeah, we're going to be there on Wednesday the 27th.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know
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Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark.
There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant. There's Jerry over there.
So it's Stuff You Should Know, the podcast.
Clean studio version.
I know, it feels a little weird in here.
Like it's too good for us or something, you know what I mean?
Yeah, just so you folks know,
Jerry tasked a couple of the editor engineers here
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Nice.
Not that it was Jerry's fault,
and she said, clean up my mess.
Well, she clapped twice in rapid succession.
They know what that means.
Right.
The whole office.
I mean, snap to it.
Looks good though.
It does.
But now we actually have room to put stuff.
So we should put some stuff in here.
I agree.
It's a little bear.
A papa's on right there.
That'd be nice.
I don't know, huh?
Well, we could fit a small papa's on.
Most people don't realize,
but this place is lousy with Ikea lamps.
I mean, everywhere.
And like the cheapest ones.
Like they're one of them's on fire right now.
Yeah, that one.
Oh, yeah.
Smoldering.
Smoldering's still fire, Chuck.
Speaking of fire.
Yes.
You want to know somebody who had some fire in her?
More than most people realize.
Yeah.
Rosa Parks.
Yeah.
Who is now one of my all time heroes.
Because before the Rosa Parks I knew,
again, it was like the Harriet Tubman episode.
Right.
She was in school.
She's a great American.
Respect her, revere her.
Here's why she didn't give up her seat on the bus.
No.
Yeah.
Like not only is that like just the tip of the iceberg,
it wasn't until about the last five or so years, I think.
No, about last four years.
That like a full picture of this woman and who she was
and like what she stood for and what drove her
emerged not just to the public in general,
but to historians even.
Because her personal papers were basically held up
in auction for years and years and years.
And now, now that they've been donated for like 10 years
to the Library of Congress,
we're starting to get a clear picture of her.
And she was even more worth revering
than people knew before.
Yeah.
I mean, I think what the story isn't is Rosa Parks
was just a quiet lady who was super tired on the bus one day.
So she didn't want to get up.
Her dogs were yapping.
Yeah, not true.
And she even makes a point in her personal papers saying,
I was 42 years old.
I was no more tired than I was after any day at work.
But what I was tired of was being told to get up
by a white bus driver to make room for a white passenger.
I was not, my dogs weren't barking.
Right.
So she, I think one of the reasons why she was kind of
whittled down into this woman who was just tired
and wasn't going to give up her seat
because she shouldn't have had to in the first place.
And then she was a very meek, quiet person also
was another way that she was drawn.
I think one of the reasons why she was whittled into that
package was because she became an icon
for the civil rights movement.
And one of the things that the civil rights movement
had to do for better or worse was to get the establishment
both white and black on the side of the civil rights movement
which was a movement of agitation.
And if you agitated at the time,
this is the Jim Crow era, that meant trouble.
This wasn't like just trouble like people are gonna yell
at you on Twitter.
This was trouble like the cops might arrest you
for some made up infraction and then beat and rape you
on the way to the jail.
And then you would end up in the prison system.
Kind of trouble.
Like this is the kind of trouble that a woman
who refused to give up her seat on the bus
faced it at this time.
So the idea of taking a woman who was I guess palatable
to as many people as possible and saying,
look at this woman, we need to protect this woman's rights
and do what's right.
I think that's why she got kind of whittled down into that.
But if you were looking back now historically,
there was so much more to her than just that.
And she was certainly not meek and mild.
Yeah, I mean distilling the story down for school books
is one thing, but like I'm glad now that people
can get a more robust picture.
So a lot of this comes from a website called
greatblackheroes.com had a really good lengthy article.
And then also I want to shout out a book series
called Little People, Big Dreams.
And it's a kid's book series that we've been reading
to my daughter.
Like it's kind of all she wants to read right now.
And they are on great women in history
and kind of brutally honest for to be reading to kids.
But they didn't, it's kind of cool.
They weren't, they didn't whitewash anything.
It's sort of like Maya Angelou was not treated well
by white people, like you read that to your kid.
And Rosa Parks is one.
And then there's Frida Kahlo, Coco Chanel,
Amelia Earhart, Mary Curie, Agatha Christie and more.
But it's pretty brutal.
Like they draw Amelia Earhart skeleton on the beach.
Kind of brutal.
You know what?
That's the only one we haven't gotten to yet.
Because every night it's read Frida, read Frida.
But it's literally like Frida Kahlo is lying in the street
after she gets hit by a taxi and she's bloody
and her legs don't work again after that.
So I mean it's pretty brutal stuff, but I don't know.
It's kind of cool.
Kids can read the stuff and digest it, I think.
Sure.
It's a good way to begin them on the path
toward true stories.
And to sharpen them to like a razor's edge at a young age.
Look out for taxis.
Yeah, that's good advice at any age.
All right, so Rosa Parks, let's go back
to where she was born in Tuskegee, Alabama
on February 4th, 1913 to, well,
she was born Rosa Louise McCauley
to James and Lenora McCauley who were a carpenter
and school teacher, respectively.
Right, her parents split.
I guess she, I don't know how old she was.
I guess she was younger than six,
but her father went to go look for work up North
and her mom wanted to stay in the South.
So she and her mom and her brother moved in
with her mother's parents, her grandparents.
And her grandfather played a really distinct role
in shaping her.
Cause she moved in with them when she was,
like I said, around six.
And at the time in this place, Pine Level,
which is outside of Montgomery, Alabama,
there was a lot of clan violence,
a lot of violence against blacks
with the hands of the Ku Klux Klan.
And her grandfather was not having it.
He was actually, he was the son of a slave woman
and a slave owner.
So he was, I believe, half white.
He was a slave himself.
He had an owner at a young age
who really brutally mistreated him,
tried to starve him for a little bit.
And her grandfather developed what she called
a very intense, passionate hatred for white people.
And definitely imparted that to his daughters
and his granddaughter, grandchildren,
wouldn't let his grandchildren play with white kids,
didn't let his daughters work for white families.
He was very much, and it sounds like pretty well founded,
against white people.
And definitely some of that rubbed off on Rose
at the very least her eyes were opened
to just how unjust the system was
at the time when she was growing up.
Well, yeah, and just,
it wasn't even just through his eyes.
Like she went to a segregated school
that she had to walk to.
White students were picked up and bused to the school.
She went to an elementary school
called the Montgomery Industrial School for Girls.
Very cool school that was created
by some northern white northerners
to basically try and foster education
in these more rural black communities in the south.
And that didn't go over well, educating kids.
So that school was burned down twice.
And then coupled that with all the influence
from her grandfather.
And it's no surprise that Rosa Parks
from a very, very early age was an activist.
Yeah, so and being an activist,
we're talking like from age six onward, right?
So she dropped out of school,
which would have been a huge turning point.
She had to take care of her grandmother.
And then I think her mom later on,
cause they both fell ill.
And she met I think at age 17 or 18.
And then later on at age 19,
she married her husband, Raymond Parks.
And he encouraged her to go back and finish school.
And she did and it was a huge move
because she was very much meant to be an educated person.
So the fact that she met Raymond
was a huge influence in that respect.
He was also a big influence on her
because she said that he was the first activist,
like real activist that she ever met.
And I believe this was even before the NAACP was in town.
This guy was like a grassroots activist.
And he and his group were basically armed.
Do you remember in the Black Panthers episode
where like the whole idea of arming yourself
came out of the South?
Though this guy was like,
Raymond Parks was one of the real deal people
who originated that.
And he and the group of activists that he met with,
they would all come to the house
and everyone would have a gun.
And apparently Rosa Parks said sometimes
there were so many guns on the table
that she didn't have any place to set the refreshments
during these meetings.
But these meetings weren't like,
you know, how are we gonna get white people back?
It was how are we gonna protect like the Scottsboro boys
from false rape accusations?
He was an early pre NAACP activist in Montgomery.
Yeah, and later on was a member of the NAACP.
We should do a show on the Scottsboro boys at some point.
Yeah.
It's too much to get into here,
but the short version is a group of black men on a train
were accused of rape by two white women
who just made up this story, basically.
Yeah.
It went to trial a few times and well,
you know what, we'll save the outcome.
Okay.
Cause there are all kinds of outcomes
because it went to trial so many times.
So she did finish high school
and she became involved along with her husband
in the Montgomery chapter of the NAACP
and worked as their secretary for 14 years.
So not only was she an activist,
but she was involved in service of these organizations.
Like she worked for them.
Like whatever you need done, I will do.
And anyone who's ever volunteered like knows that,
I guess, foot soldiers for lack of a better term
are some of the most important people to,
like in the black panthers episode when, you know,
the women didn't get nearly the recognition
they should have gotten for just keeping
that organization running on time.
So, but she was more than a volunteer though.
She had some really, some jobs with some real gravity.
Like she was an investigator of sexual assault
of black women by white men,
which is a very dangerous thing to do
because you're going to like interview witnesses
to crimes that aren't being prosecuted
because they were perpetrated by white people.
She was a justice for prisoner advocate.
She did a lot of like really important stuff.
And as she was doing this stuff as the secretary
for the local NAACP, she was also making contacts
that would later become really important
in this nascent civil rights movement
that largely grew out of the Montgomery bus boycott
we're going to talk about.
I had no idea how big of an event it was.
I knew it was big, but I didn't realize like
how far reaching the effects of it were.
Oh yeah, and this another kind of important thing
happened to her as far as integration goes
is she got a job type job at Maxwell Air Force Base
for a little while, which because it was a federal
institution was integrated.
And this was the first time that she had,
first time she had worked in a,
or basically been in a professional integrated atmosphere.
And that along with the Highlander Folk School,
which is maybe we should do a show on that too.
In 1955, she went to a meeting, a workshop
at the Highlander Folk School.
And this is in the hills of Tennessee.
And it is still open today as the Highlander Research
and Education Center, not in that original building,
but it was just this great folk school
where they prepared kids for activism,
workers, tried to get people involved in civil rights.
And she actually got sponsored by the white couple
that she worked for to go to these meetings
at Moniqueville, Tennessee.
So that Maxwell Air Force Base you mentioned,
one of the things she later said,
I think they found in her papers,
was a description of like,
because it was an integrated base,
the bus service on base was integrated as well.
So she would be riding next to like a white friend
on the bus on base.
And then once they would get off of the bus on base
and get onto a city bus,
they would have to stop their conversation
and get into the different sections,
the white section and the colored section.
And that was just the reality of it.
And one thing that has really come through from her papers
is that she made a conscious decision
to never normalize that,
to not be like, well, that's just how it is.
That's just life,
that she would never let herself do that.
Instead it was, this is messed up,
this has to be changed.
She was able to get through her day with this knowledge,
but she was never like, this is normal or this is okay.
Yeah, I mean, she said it required,
I think the quote was a lot of mental gymnastics
just to survive day to day as a black person in America.
So in other words, yeah, not accept it
and do everything I can to wrap my head around
what I can do moving forward.
Right.
Should we take a break?
Yeah, man, I think so.
All right, take a break and we'll come back
and we will start on December 1st, 1955, very important day.
We'll see you guys next time.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called
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All right, so it's December 1st, 1955.
Rosa Parks is working as a seamstress at the time
at a department store.
She gets off work like she does every day
and boards bus 2857 Cleveland Avenue bus at about 6 o'clock.
And here's the deal with the buses at the time,
is there were a certain amount of rows set aside
for white people.
And then there was a sign that said black people,
or they probably said colored people back then,
can sit from here back.
But that sign could move.
So as more white people get on the bus,
the bus driver gets up and moves that sign back
and says, all right, black folks,
you got to get up, get out of your seats,
because now the white section is here
and just keep doing that until,
sensibly the entire bus could be full of white people
and they just say, sorry, you all have to get off.
Right, yeah, you either had to get up and move your seat.
If there were not seats left yet to stand,
if there was no standing room,
you had to get off the bus, right?
And then if the bus you were getting on,
if you were African-American,
if the white section was already full,
you had to get into the front of the bus,
pay, get off of the bus and get onto that back door.
You couldn't even walk through the white section.
Right, and then you could take your seat
in the colored section.
So there was a lot going on here.
At least half of this law was unwritten custom, right?
The local ordinance in Montgomery, Alabama said
that buses had to be segregated.
There was a white section
and there was a colored section, they put it, right?
All that stuff about moving the sign,
about getting up and having to leave the bus
if there wasn't any standing room for you
if more white people came on.
All of that was just customary.
That was not law.
That was not the local ordinance,
but it was so practiced on a daily basis
that it might as well have been the law.
For sure, and that's really all that matters
is if everyone was playing ball,
that's what was gonna happen.
Yeah, because the courts would even prosecute
as if you had broken the law,
if you had not actually broken the law,
but had broken this custom.
So yeah, for all intents and purposes, it was the law.
So the driver of that bus was one James Blake
and Rosa had, well, she had a long memory
and a previous incident with Mr. Blake, 12 years previous.
In 1943, she had paid her fare
and like you were talking about
with the fact that they couldn't even
walk through the white section,
he said, you gotta get off the bus,
go around to the back,
forced her, well, she'd already gotten on,
said, no, you gotta re-enter on the rear.
She got out and he was like, psych, close the door
and drove off with her bus fare.
Right, yeah, she had already paid.
That was the 1943 incident.
And she remembered, 12 years later, who James Blake was.
I would probably not forget that bus driver.
Of course not.
So on this day, she got on
and she took her seat in the colored section
and when she sat down, again, she was behind the sign
and I guess after a couple of stops
and think about this, man, imagine riding the bus
and say you have like seven stops,
think about that pit that would be in your stomach
on a daily basis, like, am I gonna have to get up?
Am I gonna have to be humiliated?
Am I gonna have to give up my seat to a white person?
Because even if somebody who was told that they had
to get up because a white person needed to sit there,
even if they just kind of quietly complied,
that doesn't get the point across
how they were feeling right then.
Anybody would be humiliated by that.
And I read that one of the reasons why buses,
not just in Montgomery, but throughout the segregated South,
they were kind of flash points
because people were in such close quarters.
The racism was right up in your face
in front of a bunch of other people.
So the humiliation was even more pronounced, right?
So Rosa Park gets on the bus, she takes her seat
in the colored section and after a few stops,
some white people got on and the driver, James Blake,
said that it was time for them to move,
that these white people needed a seat
and he was moving the sign back at least one row.
Yeah, so at this point,
there's one white dude left without a seat.
So as is custom, he made four black folks
get out of their two seats on that row.
Everyone had to move back
because there had to be a whole new white row
just for this one guy.
Three of the passengers got up and moved.
Rosa Parks just slid over to the window seat
and sat there and he said, are you gonna get up?
And she said, no, I'm not.
He said, well, if you don't stand up,
I'm gonna have to call the police and have you arrested.
And she said, you may do that.
That's awesome.
I know, man, I mean, just so brave.
And so the police did come, she was arrested.
She was booked, charged with disorderly conduct
and bailed out by Clifford Durr and Edgar Nixon,
who were the local president
of the chapter of the NAACP at the time.
Right, so she's out at least temporarily.
Yeah, the next evening.
So she spent the night in jail.
I didn't run across any statements
or any kind of evidence that she was like physically
mistreated or verbally abused by the police.
But that seems to be unusual
for people who were arrested
for not giving up their seats on the bus.
What, that she was not mistreated?
Right.
Yeah, I mean, I'm sure they didn't throw out the welcome mat.
No, no, but this is actually, this is noteworthy here.
Do you wanna talk about how she was not the first person
that year, not the first woman to have been arrested
for not giving up her seat on the bus?
Yeah, sure.
This is something I didn't realize
and I think a lot of people didn't realize this,
but there were at least two other women in Montgomery
who were arrested that same year.
One was Claudette Colvin, she was 15 at the time.
Yeah, when she pregnant too?
She got pregnant afterward.
Oh, okay.
But she was 15 and she in March was arrested
for not giving up her seat on the bus.
She said at the time, she was scared to death
but she felt on one side, so during her truth
was holding her down and on the other side,
Harriet Tubman was holding her down
and she was not about to get up.
So they took her off the bus and arrested her
and apparently she was ridiculed
and treated rather roughly.
There was another woman, her name was Mary Louise Smith,
I believe she was 18 at the time.
She had been arrested like in October for the same thing.
I didn't get the impression
that she was necessarily treated roughly,
but Rosa Parks when she was arrested,
from what I can tell, she was treated with the respect
that would be afforded to a middle-class black woman
at the time in Montgomery, Alabama,
which is to say with maybe the slightest measure of respect,
which is to say she wasn't beaten on the way to jail.
There's a book by the way called Claudette Colvin,
Colin, Twice Toward Justice from Phil Hoose,
or Hoose, and I think a lot of people these days
are trying to shine a little light
on some of the lesser-known figures
of the civil rights movement
and books are being written and stuff like that,
which is pretty awesome.
And she was asked, Claudette Colvin was asked,
like why does she think it was Rosa Parks and not her?
And she had a whole list of reasons
and all of them are pretty legitimate,
that Rosa Parks was a very, again,
a palatable person to a large swath of people.
And more to the point, she was also 15
and the NAACP didn't think that a 15-year-old
was gonna be the most reliable icon
to kind of project into the national forefront.
Yeah, not to say that a lot of people
have said over the years that it was staged.
So because they set Rosa Parks up,
or not set her up, but they picked her to do this
because she was palatable.
They staged this whole thing to make,
which would have been fine
if that's the way you wanna kickstart the bus boycott.
But from all accounts, it was a in-the-moment decision.
She said, I didn't know that I was gonna get arrested
and I was gonna sit down.
It's just something that happened.
And so on the one hand, the people who say that,
no, this was staged, the NAACP,
and even before the NAACP was around,
buses had been like a target of black activists
in Montgomery in particular for decades.
I think the first bus boycott was in 1900
and it wasn't even a bus, it was a trolley line,
as well as boycott it.
So she, and having already been the secretary of the NAACP
and an activist herself for years by then,
she must have been fully aware of the potential outcome,
which proved to be the actual outcome
from her arrest for not giving up her seat.
But the idea of saying that this was all staged,
it does a couple of things.
It's almost like a casually racist way
of just kind of diminishing it,
because it does two things.
One, it takes away her bravery,
because if it was staged-
To make her own decision.
She had support the whole time,
it would have taken away a measure of fear.
And then secondly, it also makes the NAACP look kind of sneaky.
Like there's socially engineering stuff
and then pretending like that's not the case.
So I think by saying like, no, this was staged,
it really undermines the reality of the situation,
which is that this brave woman said she'd had enough.
Yeah, and you're right,
it probably occurred to her the ramifications of this,
but I bet you anything in the moment,
she was just like, nope, not getting up.
That's what I understand, that's what she's always said.
Yeah, so here's what happened from there.
She was arrested, like I said,
she gets out on bail over that weekend,
a bunch of churches got together
and they started talking boycott
on the winter trial comes around.
There's a group called the Women's Political Council
and they handed out 35,000 handbills
that basically said, please children, grownups,
don't ride the bus at all on Monday,
please stay off the buses on Monday.
Let's really try and make a difference here
because it was, I think at the time,
black people made up 75% of the passengers.
Yeah.
So it could have a real impact
on like the finances of the bus company.
Yeah, and it just started out as a boycott for one day,
for the Monday following Rosa Parks arrest,
which happened on a Thursday,
and they were just gonna do it for one day,
but the success of it was so surprising.
I think they were hoping for like 50% reduction.
It turned out, I saw both 90 and 99% reduction
in ridership by African-Americans that day.
Right, and if they make up 75%.
That's a big loss for the city bus line, right?
For sure.
So it was such a success that they said,
well, maybe let's keep this going
and see what we can do with this.
Because initially the demands of the Montgomery bus boycott
of 1955 was that one of them was black riders
be treated with courtesy, pretty low hanging request.
Another one was that the seats be given
on a first come, first serve basis, which was the law,
and that black people sit from back to front,
white people sit from front to back.
So they were still saying like,
we can keep the segregation,
but people shouldn't have to give up their seats.
And then the last one was they wanted black bus drivers
to be hired to drive the predominantly
African-American routes.
So that you didn't have to deal with an armed,
yeah, an armed white bus driver,
because they were armed and they had basically
police powers to enforce segregation on the bus.
So the original boycott thing,
their demands were not extraordinarily radical.
And when the boycott was a success on that first Monday,
they decided to extend it and they also decided
maybe they should expand their demands a little more.
So while all this is going on,
she was found guilty on that Monday.
She was fined 10 bucks plus court costs of $4
for $14 total and said, nope, I'm gonna appeal this conviction.
She challenged that basically what she was challenging
was segregation in general, not being constitutional.
And that ended up being the argument that was,
well, we'll get to the court case and how it escalated,
but she was found guilty.
And the other notable thing that happened was
one Ralph David Abernathy and Dr. Martin Luther King,
who was a young minister in town of Dexter Avenue Baptist,
he was elected president of what was called the MIA,
the Montgomery Improvement Association,
which they formed because of the success of the boycott.
So you have this new organization,
then about a month later, month and a half,
at the end of January, Martin Luther King's home was bombed.
Everyone was unharmed in the incident,
but it really ramped up the stakes of what was going on.
Yeah, well, for sure.
And apparently the Montgomery Improvement Association
is credited with making the boycott successful.
And the way that they made it successful
was through a carpool they set up.
They bought a bunch of station wagons
and put them in the name of some of the black churches in town.
And these station wagons would basically recreate
the bus routes, they drove predetermined routes.
And they were giving like 20,000 people a ride every day.
That's how successful this was.
And they put such a crimp in the finances
of the city bus line that a couple of things happened.
One, they had to lay off workers, close down lines,
raise their fares, like it really hurt the city bus lines.
And then secondly, the city,
and I believe maybe even the state,
sued the Montgomery Improvement Association
for this boycott, which is apparently illegal
under a 1921 Alabama law.
Yeah, they sued against the car service specifically,
saying that the bus company had an exclusive franchise.
Right.
And they did get an injunction in November of 1956.
But all of this comes out of the fact
that in like 30 something years earlier in 1921,
Alabama passed an anti-boycott act.
Right.
Which basically said that it's illegal
for you to not ride the bus in this case.
In that case, sure.
Or at least organize people and get them
to not ride the bus.
Yeah.
It was something like it was a misdemeanor
to organize against somebody carrying out
lawful business or whatever.
So they were getting them on two things.
That boycott and then infringing
on the bus lines franchise in that city, right?
Right, so what do you do if you are suing,
or I'm sorry, if you have an anti-boycott act,
I mean, you can't arrest everyone.
So they go after, I think 89,
a Martin Luther King Jr. and 89 other members of the MIA.
And obviously because they're the most,
I think how many of them, 24 or more ministers,
they're the most prominent members.
And he was fined 500 bucks.
And I spent a couple of weeks in jail.
Yeah, so he's very proud of his crime.
He should be.
Yeah, sure.
So now Martin Luther King has appealing.
So you've got a few things going on here.
You've got Rosa Parks, who has been convicted
and now is appealing her $10 plus $4 in court costs fine
for breaking the city ordinance, even though she didn't.
You've got Martin Luther King now, who is appealing
his $500 fine for the boycott
and the infringing on the bus lines franchise.
And then you have something else.
You have a class action suit called Browder versus Gale.
It was named after, oh, what's her name?
The woman who's the lead plaintiff in the case.
Her name is Aurelia S. Browder.
And the Gale in the case was the Montgomery mayor,
I think, William Gale.
And we'll talk about that.
Well, let's take a break and we'll talk about this case.
And we'll come back to the drum beat
of the court system starting to kick in.
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All right, so appeals run slow anyway,
but in the South, if it's a case like this,
it's going to go super slow because the hope
from the white establishment is, you know,
maybe enough time will go by and these people just sort of
get in line and forget about it,
get tired of this boycott and everything
will just go back to normal.
Yeah, which is kind of a gamble because this boycott was not
showing any signs of cracking.
So they were basically making that bet
on the back of the city bus line and on the jobs
of the drivers who were being laid off because ridership
was down so low.
381 days.
381 days, right.
For the boycott.
So like I said, the drumbeat of the court system
was starting to grow a little bit louder
and you had three big cases, Martin Luther King's case,
Rosa Parks case, and you had Browder versus Gale.
And Browder versus Gale represented four women,
originally five, but four women who had been convicted
of breaking the law for not giving up their seat
on the bus in Montgomery.
One of them was Claudette Colvin,
another was Mary Louise Smith, I believe,
and then Aurelia Browder, and then lastly was...
Susie McDonald.
Susie McDonald, right.
So these four women got together and sued the mayor,
the bus line, a few bus drivers,
the city public works commission,
just a big group of people and they were suing to,
all three of those cases were suing to question
the constitutionality and the legality
of segregation in general,
but specifically on the bus lines.
And there was a talk at first by Freddie Gray,
who was the lead lawyer in Browder v. Gale,
that of including Rosa Parks,
but he very, very wisely kept her separate from that case
because he said he wanted the courts
to just consider one thing,
not whether Rosa Parks was guilty or not,
but whether the segregation on the Montgomery buses
was legal and constitutional.
So he kept those separate very smartly.
Yeah, I think he knew that he could get this
to the Supreme Court this way.
It was a test case.
And that was his ultimate goal.
Sure.
Because it was a state statute though
and the state constitution of Alabama,
it was of course first brought before district court,
three judges in US district court on June 5th, 1956,
they ruled two to one,
that segregation was unconstitutional,
of course, they cited Brown versus Board of Education
as precedent and it eventually wound its way
to the Supreme Court in 1956 on December 17th.
Actually, that was pretty quick considering.
Yeah.
And they rejected all appeals
and voted nine to nothing, nine to zero,
that it was unconstitutional.
Yep, nine to nothing,
which is, I mean, that's really saying something,
unanimous Supreme Court decision regarding segregation.
Yeah, in the 1950s.
Yeah, so that was huge.
I think Dr. King was in court that day
when he was told by a reporter about that decision,
the Supreme Court decision.
And even after he said, we're keeping up the boycott.
Yeah.
Because when they implement this desegregation
on the buses, we'll stop the boycott.
Right.
And after the Supreme Court ruling came through,
the city of Montgomery saw pretty clearly
that there wasn't any way to keep this up any longer.
And I believe within three days,
the buses were desegregated.
And on the first day that they were desegregated,
Rosa Parks took her seat on a bus in the front row,
I believe.
Yeah, they hired black bus drivers.
And this is after, by the way, 381 days
of a total sales loss of 65%.
So...
Yeah, and on the other side,
Ralph David Abernathy's home was bombed,
Martin Luther King's home was bombed,
people were in jail, people were in court.
It was a big struggle down in Montgomery.
Yeah, so on December 21st, Dr. King and his white friend
Reverend Glenn Smiley sat together on the front row
with Ralph David Abernathy, street here in Atlanta.
Yeah, yeah.
Name for him, Edie Dixon and Fred Gray,
the attorney that saw that case.
Right.
So that was a huge thing.
It did a number of things.
It made Rosa Parks an icon.
Yeah.
It projected Martin Luther King
into the national spotlight.
That was basically where he first found national fame.
And basically was like, well, this guy's the leader
of the civil rights movement now.
And it also was a huge domino in the idea
of desegregation in general, not just on buses,
not just in Montgomery, but the concept,
it followed in the wake of Plessy V Ferguson,
which it was just one of those court cases
that said separate facilities is inherently racist
because the only reason you would have separate facilities
is because you think one group is superior over the other
and they shouldn't have to consort or mix.
Right.
That's inherently unconstitutional.
And this was one of those dominoes that fell in that chain
that led to desegregation across the Jim Crow South.
And like a laser, this particular case
and the changes it brought were focused right
onto Rosa Parks, her act, her courage, what she did.
Yeah, and this was within our parents' lifetime.
I know, I was wondering, I was like,
why am I so much more jazzed about this than Harriet Tubman?
I love Harriet Tubman's story,
but I remember when I was researching,
I wasn't nearly as jazzed and I realized,
like I can relate to this woman so much better
just because this was pretty recent, you know?
Well, yeah.
And just the notion that where we are as a country now,
racially, this was not that long ago.
So for the people in the camp of saying,
just get over things, African Americans,
just get over things, it's like,
this was not hundreds and hundreds of years ago.
This was very recently,
these like my peers' parents had to live through this.
Well, one thing Rosa Parks is now known for,
what they didn't realize before,
is her act in like the civil rights movement
that grew out of like the next 10 years, 15 years,
there's this idea that around 1970,
there was a button put on that,
and it was like, you guys were successful,
way to go, we can stop doing this now.
Rosa Parks is like, no, no, it's not done.
This hasn't changed up until she died in 2005.
She was like, the struggle's still continuing.
People didn't realize that about her
until this collection was opened.
Yeah, this all came,
there was significant cost to her family, to her,
her husband, her and her husband
both suffered through stomach ulcers.
Because of this, they lost their jobs.
Eventually, they left Alabama,
said, let's go to Virginia,
and Virginia wasn't a whole lot better.
They said, all right, let's go to Detroit,
kept going north.
And then finally, after not having a job for a long time,
she was hired as secretary for John Conyers,
brand new, brand newly elected black congressman
who she would work for for 23 years.
And Mr. Conyers, he was the one who stepped down last year
after sexual assault allegations
after serving many, many years in Congress
and was a civil rights icon.
So it's kind of a very sad ending to that story.
But Rosa worked for him in 77.
Her husband, James, died of cancer.
Her brother died of cancer three months later.
Her mom died two years after that.
But I get the sense that after that,
it really kind of freed her to really go back to work
and devote herself once again to the cause.
Because after those family members passed away,
she established the Rosa Parks Scholarship Foundation
and the Rosa and Raymond Parks Institute
for Self-Development and wrote two memoirs.
Yeah.
She was busy.
She was.
And then very sadly, I know, I remember this,
in 1994, when she was home invaded
and robbed and like hit over the head.
By a guy named Joseph Skipper.
Yeah, man.
That was just like, I mean, are you kidding me with that?
For 58 bucks.
Of all the houses to accidentally break into?
Yeah.
What do you think he knew?
It was Rosa Parks?
I don't know.
I don't know, but he...
I've seen nothing to indicate that that was true.
He knew that he would go down as the man
who robbed and beat Rosa Parks.
Oh, well, yeah.
So, yeah, I don't think he was,
she was targeted because she was Rosa Parks
or anything like that.
I think she's just a little old lady.
The impression I have is it doesn't matter
if she was Rosa Parks or not.
Sure.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, yeah.
So, that was 94, you said?
And then like right afterward,
there was a huge national outcry
and she moved into like a very secure high rise in Detroit
where she lived until she died in 2005.
I believe she died in that apartment.
92 years young.
And she had a slew of honors, unprecedented honors
in this country.
She was transported her body to Washington, D.C.
And she laid an honor under the rotunda,
the U.S. Capitol.
First woman to get that honor.
The second African-American
and the first non-government American ever to have this honor.
Yep.
Amazing.
I mean, that is a high honor.
Yeah.
She died every flag on public land in the United States
and around the world was flown at half-mast,
which is pretty, pretty great too.
Yeah.
George W. Bush made sure that happened.
And then here's just some of her lifetime achievement awards.
NAACP gave her what's called the Spingarn Medal in 1979.
Their highest honor.
She's in the Michigan Women's Hall of Fame.
Martin Luther King, Jr. Award, 1980.
You could have just stopped at the Michigan Hall of Fame.
Michigan Women's Hall of Fame?
Yeah.
The Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1996.
Yeah, still.
Michigan Women's Hall of Fame.
Congressional gold medal?
No?
Yeah.
Now we're in a contest.
Time Magazine named her as one of the 20 most influential
iconic figures of the 20th century.
It's a big one.
Okay.
And then yeah, he mentioned George W. Bush
ordered half-mast flags in 2005.
So again, there was this idea
that she was just a tired little old lady
who was quietly brave and didn't give up her seat,
and she was kind of meek and quiet.
And in 2014, her personal collection,
the Rosa Parks collection,
was sold to the Howard Buffett Foundation,
Warren Buffett's son.
They bought it for a song at like $4.5 million.
And it's something like, I think, 6,500 documents
and 2,500 photographs.
And it is her personal papers,
like notes for speeches, notes for her books, I believe,
correspondence, and it paints this picture
that no one had of her before,
which was, no, like this lady was an activist
through and through her whole life.
She was an activist who wanted to talk about
and agitate for the rights of black Americans
and how messed up the situation was that they lived in
and that she wouldn't normalize this.
She would learn to deal with it as much as she needed to
while she was working to change it.
And there was just a surprise to a lot of people
when they cracked open these papers
and found that picture of her.
Yeah, also want to shout out article
how history got the Rosa Parks story wrong.
And this was written by the same person
who wrote the award-winning book
The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks.
Her name is Gene Theoharis.
Theoharis, it's all one word.
Yeah, I know.
It sounds like it should be hyphenated.
It's really easy to say, but how do you say it?
I have no idea.
I know, I know.
But she's professor of polycyte at Brooklyn College
of CUNY.
Yep.
Man.
Great lady.
Yep.
So if you want to know more about Rosa Parks,
go out on the internet, educate yourself.
I still haven't seen that movie.
Have you seen that?
No.
The About the Bus Boycott?
No.
I mean, it was a significant event.
I had no idea.
Okay, well, I think I said go search stuff
in there somewhere.
So that means it's time for Listener Mail.
I'm gonna call this, oh, Tiny Things.
All right.
So guys, let me start off by saying,
enjoy the podcast very much.
Fine.
Aside from being interesting and entertaining,
it very much helps my time in the car.
We get that a lot.
Sure.
Commute helped.
People would go insane if it weren't for us.
Several episodes ago, I believe Chuck mentioned
that you love Tiny Things.
I do.
Josh likes things that are grossly oversized.
That giant pocket watch over there.
Yeah.
It's kind of a pain.
I'm wearing it like Flavor Fight.
He mentioned loving Tiny Things.
There's something extraordinarily satisfying about them.
I agree.
I love Tiny Things would be remiss
if I did not bring you to the Museum of Jurassic Technology.
I love that, please.
I know, I've been there too.
It's in Los Angeles.
They're not one but two fantastic exhibits of Tiny Things.
I have the needle and micro mosaics.
I don't think I saw those, did you?
The tiny thing I remember was like the dioramas
of the trailers.
And I have the needle.
I remember that.
Oh yeah?
Yeah, I don't remember the micro mosaics.
I haven't been in many years though.
Yeah, I see.
I have the needle features delightful
whimsical miniature sculptures
actually small enough to fit into the eye of a needle.
Yeah, well there you go.
That's a little too small for me.
Okay, so you like, so you like...
I like the tiny Tabasco bottle
so you get a new shirt.
You like to feel like you're a giant, not like a god.
Yeah.
Gotcha.
Exactly, I just want to be taller.
The micro mosaics exhibit also requires
a magnifying glass to enjoy.
However beautiful this exhibit
has a slightly creepy aspect to it.
The tiny mosaic pieces are in fact,
bits of butterfly wings.
Yeah.
That's not too creepy.
Oh, I mean...
Did they kill the butterflies?
Depends, yeah.
How'd they come across those wings?
Where they rogue kill, if so, that's fine.
Yeah, what a job.
Go out and just try and find dead butterflies.
Yeah.
All in all, these exhibits
have a wonderful feel of magic realism.
Museum also features a lovely rooftop garden
as well as a meditative tea room
to enjoy a complimentary cup of tea.
Interesting, that is all guys.
Cheers from Sandra Williams.
Thanks a lot for the shout out, Sandra.
That is indeed a great place.
If you're ever in Los Angeles,
everybody go check out the Museum of Jurassic Technology.
Just go in with your mind open and thank us later.
Yeah, get out of Ripley's Believe It or Not.
Okay, both, you know.
Sure.
I said get out of Ripley's Believe It or Not.
Okay, yeah, but I mean, Jack Palance, man,
how do you pass that out?
I don't get it.
Remember, he was the host of the TV show?
Oh, was he?
Or not.
Yeah, my brother worked with him on City Slickers 2.
Got him.
And that was one story where, you know,
he's kind of old at the time,
where Scott as the AD is to walk him,
second AD is to walk the talent to the set
from their trailer.
And it was through the desert, the Rocky Desert,
and Scott was like, you know,
look out for that right, Mr. Palance or something like that.
And one day he was just like,
I don't need you to tell me how to walk.
I think Scott like, shrank down the horse.
I can't remember if that's exactly what he said, but.
But I'll bet, I'll bet Jack Palance felt so bad
for yelling at Scott of all people.
I doubt it.
You know, it's Scott.
And he didn't delight in Scott like everyone else does.
He's Jack Palance.
Yeah.
Well, if you want to tell us how great you think Scott is,
you can tweet to us.
I'm at Josh Clark and at SYSK podcast.
You can also check out my website, rucerysclark.com.
Charles W. Chuck Bryant is on facebook.com
at facebook.com slash Charles W. Chuck Bryant.
There's also facebook.com slash stuff you should know page.
You can send us all an email, including Jerry
to stuffpodcast at howstuffworks.com.
And as always, join us at our home on the web,
stuffyoushouldknow.com.
For more on this and thousands of other topics,
visit howstuffworks.com.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called David Lasher
and Christine Taylor, stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called on the iHeart radio
app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander each week
to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, ya everybody, about my new podcast
and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say.
Bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.