Sweet justice: Georgia Gilmore and the Montgomery bus boycott
Dublin Core
Title
Sweet justice: Georgia Gilmore and the Montgomery bus boycott
Description
Georgia Gilmore heard about Mrs. Rosa Parks who had been arrested when she wouldn't give up her seat to a black man on a city bus in 1955. But something was also cooking in Montgomery, Alabama about the same time -- a woman who cooked to feed and fund the people willing to participate in the Montgomery fun boycott. Georgia knew there was no justice under segregation so she boycotted the arrest of Mrs. Parks by staying off the city buses for one day. In order to get others to stay off the buses for one day, Georgia cooked and sold her crispy chicken, sandwiches, cakes, and pies to pay off the fines that people got when participating in the boycott. After testifying in court, Dr. Martin Luther King encouraged Georgia to keep cooking. On December 20, 1956, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that segregated buses were unconstitutional.
Author
Rockliff, Mara
Publisher
Random House Studio
Date
2022
Picture Book Entry Item Type Metadata
ISBN
978-1-5247-2064-3
City of Publication
New York
Author of Abstract
Abstract provided by Valerie Ubbes, 2023
Citation
Rockliff, Mara, “Sweet justice: Georgia Gilmore and the Montgomery bus boycott,” Children's Picture Book Database at Miami University, accessed April 3, 2025, https://dlp.lib.miamioh.edu/picturebook/items/show/14265.