Montgomery Marks Rosa Parks Day With March, Prayer and Bell-Ringing Tribute
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (WAKA) — A Unity Walk in downtown Montgomery kicked off a weeklong series of events Monday honoring the 70th anniversary of the Montgomery Bus Boycott, one of the most pivotal moments of the Civil Rights Movement.
Despite rain, dozens gathered to sing, pray and march in remembrance of Parks’ arrest on Dec. 1, 1955, after she refused to give up her seat on a bus to a white man. Her act of defiance, and the 381-day boycott that followed, reshaped the nation’s fight for racial equality.
In 2018, the Alabama Legislature designated Dec. 1 as Rosa Parks Day.
Doris Crenshaw, a longtime civil rights activist, said the continued recognition is meaningful not just in Montgomery but around the world.
“It’s significant that not only in Montgomery but worldwide we recognize her and recognize the people in Montgomery that stayed in the boycott for 381 days, and we haven’t seen that anywhere else in the country,” Crenshaw said.
Crenshaw, founder and CEO of the Southern Youth Leadership Development Institute, met Parks as a 12-year-old while traveling across Alabama with her as part of the NAACP Youth Council. She said she spent many afternoons in Parks’ home, just blocks from her own.
“We had a very close relationship,” Crenshaw said. “We were in and out of her house all the time. And walking home from school every day we would pass her house and we were often in and out of there.”
St. Paul A.M.E. Church, Parks’ home church, organized the Unity Walk from Dexter Avenue King Memorial Baptist Church to the Rosa Parks Museum. The event ended with bells ringing at 6:06 p.m. — the exact time Parks was arrested 70 years ago.
“Sometimes as the years go by, we tend to erase history and we don’t talk about what happened 70 years ago,” Crenshaw said. “So I think that every year we should support the efforts to get a (national) Rosa Parks holiday — not only that, but to teach and be instructional about Rosa Parks’ history in our schools and in the nation.”
In a touching tribute, churches and houses of worship across Montgomery and around the country joined in ringing bells to mark the moment of Parks’ arrest.
A full schedule of events commemorating the 70th anniversary of the bus boycott is available at MGMbusboycott.com.



