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Sixty-eight years after Rosa Parks refused to move to the back of a Montgomery bus, history is repeating itself in the ...
Anti-Trump protestors are aiming to stir up some "Good Trouble" — the name given to planned protests against President Donald ...
"Good Trouble Lives On" was described by organizers as "a national day of action to respond to the attacks on our civil and ...
Jefferson Lines sued for discrimination against two Black men who were forced by a white driver to sit at the back of a bus ...
The former Detroit home of the late civil rights activist Rosa Parks has been approved for a local historic district ...
Florida is expected to host over 50 "Good Trouble Lives On" Anti-Trump protests on July 17. Here's where they will be in ...
Rosa Parks and her husband Raymond lived in the Detroit flat from 1961 until 1988. The flat's owner sought the historic ...
Rosa Parks' former home in Detroit has earned a local historic designation. Police are continuing investigation of a shooting ...
Rosa Parks wrote the recipe on the back of a bank envelope, and it results in pancakes that live up to their "featherlite" name.
Rosa Parks, 42, ignited the Civil Rights Movement and the end of segregation in Alabama when she refused to give up her seat on a Montgomery bus on this day in history, Dec. 1, 1955.
The Alabama Women's Tribute Statute Commission approved a design for a Rosa Parks statue that will be installed at the top of the steps of the Alabama State Capitol.