Rosa Louise Parks, who won the title of "Mother of Civil Rights Movement" by Rosa Louise Parks gave great inspiration to African American races. Rosa was born in Tuskey, Alabama on February 4, 1913, was born in James and Leona McCauley (the lifetime of Rosa Park). Rosa's parents were born before slavery was exiled from the United States of America. They had a difficult childhood, and the state of the blacks has not changed since the liberation. Rosa's mother is a teacher and her father is a farmer (Rosa Park: a pioneer of civil rights interviews).
Rosa Louise Parks, born on 4 February 1913 in Rosasqui, Alabama, was born in Rosa Macau. She was named after her grandmother Rose Perseval. Rosa was brought up by her mother Leona Edward McCauley on a grandparents' farm in a small community on the outskirts of Montgomery. Rosa received primary education in an isolated country school. In 1924 she went to Montgomery private girls school named "Miss White School". It was named after its main co-founder Alice L. White. All the students are African Americans, all the teachers are white women from the north. She married Raymond Parks and started living in Montgomery, Alabama in 1932.
Rosa Park was born on 4 February 1913 in Tuskegee, Alabama, then was Rosa Luis-Li Park. She grew up at grandparents' house at Montgomery's pine level. Her mother's name is Leona Edwards and her father's name is James Macquarie. And they gather at the Methodist Church in Africa. James is a carpenter and an architect, Leona is a teacher of their church and the University of Tuskegee. On 12th April 1912 Leona and James married later at the pine level. Rosa was named after her grandmother Rose for one year (2000 ... Brinkley)
Rosa Parks was born on 4th February 1913 at Rosa Louis Macquarie in Rosaski, Alabama. When parents James and Leona McCauley left the two-year-old Rosa separate, Rosa's mother, along with parents Ross and Sylvester Edwards, moved her family to the Alabama state pine level. Both of my life were former slaves and enthusiastic supporters of racial equality, and my family lived in Edwards' farm where Rosa would spend her youth. In one experience, Rosa 's grandfather was standing in front of their house with a shotgun, but members of KKK marched along the street.