King is important to know to be able to fully understand the way his philosophies were created and what caused him to think critically. Montgomery, Alabama was a highly segregated city filled with anger and racial tension after the passing of Brown vs. Board of Education in 1954. Though the King family had only lived in Montgomery, Alabama for less than a year, December 1st, 1955 would be a day their lives would change forever. On this day in Montgomery, Rosa Parks refused to give up her bus seat to a white passenger and was arrested.2 This infuriated all black activists to the extent that they formed a group, the Montgomery Improvement Association, and Dr. King became its president. The MIA coordinated a bus boycott that lasted some entire three-hundred-eighty-one days, causing the public transit and town businesses to financially plummet. The Montgomery bus boycott changed the future for Dr. King and opened-up opportunities that seemed to be his true calling. Up until this point, black Americans were viewed as small and weak people that did not deserve the same rights white Americans did. For the most part, they were silent. There were a few protests before this point but none like the Montgomery bus boycott. After receiving a mass amount of attention, the U.S. Supreme Court passed Browder vs. Gayle which declared Montgomery and Alabama’s bus laws unconstitutional. This was King’s first big victory as a leader which motivated him to keep
King is important to know to be able to fully understand the way his philosophies were created and what caused him to think critically. Montgomery, Alabama was a highly segregated city filled with anger and racial tension after the passing of Brown vs. Board of Education in 1954. Though the King family had only lived in Montgomery, Alabama for less than a year, December 1st, 1955 would be a day their lives would change forever. On this day in Montgomery, Rosa Parks refused to give up her bus seat to a white passenger and was arrested.2 This infuriated all black activists to the extent that they formed a group, the Montgomery Improvement Association, and Dr. King became its president. The MIA coordinated a bus boycott that lasted some entire three-hundred-eighty-one days, causing the public transit and town businesses to financially plummet. The Montgomery bus boycott changed the future for Dr. King and opened-up opportunities that seemed to be his true calling. Up until this point, black Americans were viewed as small and weak people that did not deserve the same rights white Americans did. For the most part, they were silent. There were a few protests before this point but none like the Montgomery bus boycott. After receiving a mass amount of attention, the U.S. Supreme Court passed Browder vs. Gayle which declared Montgomery and Alabama’s bus laws unconstitutional. This was King’s first big victory as a leader which motivated him to keep