<span>By refusing to give up her seat to a white man on a Montgomery, Alabama, city bus in 1955, black seamstress Rosa Parks (1913—2005) helped initiate the civil rights movement in the United States. The leaders of the local black community organized a bus boycott that began the day Parks was convicted of violating the segregation laws. Led by a young Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the boycott lasted more than a year—during which Parks not coincidentally lost her job—and ended only when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that bus segregation was unconstitutional. Over the next half-century, Parks became a nationally recognized symbol of dignity and strength in the struggle to end entrenched racial segregation.</span>
Answer:
Explanation:
James Baird Weaver and Leonidas L. Polk
The Populist platform represented views of farmers in the West.
Depends how you define nature.
The solar system is made by nature.(the big bang)
Mountains are made by nature (movement of the plates everything is located on)
Vulcanos (eruptions spit up all the earth and made these mountain like structures
Answer:
It was very long, just over one-third of a mile.
It was built through hard stone called granite.
Crews built it from both ends and from the middle, and the tunnels were just two inches off.
It was 124 feet inside the mountain,.
It was built entirely by hand.
Explanation:
It