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Baton Rouge Bus Boycott And The Civil Rights Movement

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Baton Rouge Bus Boycott And The Civil Rights Movement
Mon, 1953-06-15
*On this date in 1953, the Baton Rouge Bus boycott occurred. This was the first Black bus boycott in America.
That summer, the African American community of Baton Rouge set the tone of the modern civil rights movement. Years before the Supreme Court’s landmark Brown v. Board of Education decision, and the significant protest in Montgomery led by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and Rosa Parks, leaders of the Baton Rouge Black community stood up for racial equality. In March of 1953, Black leaders in Baton Rouge were successful in having the City Council pass Ordinance 222, which permitted them to be seated on a first-come-first-served basis.
This Ordinance stipulated that African Americans had to sit from the rear to the front

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