LRB-3953/1
PJD:wlj:jf
2005 - 2006 LEGISLATURE
October 31, 2005 - Introduced by Senators Taylor, Coggs, Robson, Risser, Jauch,
Plale, Hansen, Erpenbach, Wirch, Miller, Darling, Olsen, Harsdorf
and
Brown, cosponsored by Representatives Turner, A. Williams, Lehman,
Young, Colon, Toles, Grigsby, Kessler, Fields, Sherman, Boyle, Black,
Sinicki, Berceau, Shilling, Pocan, Pope-Roberts, Vruwink, Molepske,
Seidel, Parisi, Benedict, Hebl, Sheridan, Jeskewitz, Krawczyk, Gronemus,
Lothian, Kerkman, Albers
and Staskunas. Referred to Committee on Senate
Organization.
SJR48,1,3 1Relating to: honoring Ms. Rosa Louise Parks for her lifelong dedication to equal
2rights for all citizens, for her positive impact on American history, and for the
3legacy of civil rights that she has left for us to defend.
SJR48,1,54 Whereas, Rosa Louise Parks was born Rosa Louise McCauley on February 4,
51913, in Tuskegee, Alabama, and died on October 24, 2005, in Detroit, Michigan; and
SJR48,1,76 Whereas, Rosa Parks is often referred to as the mother of the civil rights
7movement; and
SJR48,1,98 Whereas, a seamstress by trade, Rosa Parks participated in civil rights
9activities, large and small, her entire life; and
SJR48,1,1110 Whereas, Rosa Parks became Secretary of the Montgomery NAACP in 1943,
11the same year she was denied the right to register to vote the first of 2 times; and
SJR48,1,1312 Whereas, in 1945, Rosa Parks successfully registered to vote, achieving a
13measure of equality in citizenship that would be undermined a decade later; and
SJR48,1,1514 Whereas, Rosa Parks was most well known for refusing to give up her seat on
15a Montgomery bus in 1955; and
SJR48,2,3
1Whereas, that simple act of civil disobedience led to the Montgomery bus
2boycott and ultimately a Supreme Court ruling that prohibited discrimination in
3public transit; and
SJR48,2,54 Whereas, the Montgomery bus boycott is widely credited as a historic turning
5point in the African American struggle for civil rights; and
SJR48,2,86 Whereas, the resulting victories earned in civil rights and voting rights for
7African Americans established Rosa Parks as both a leading activist and a symbolic
8figure of progress in the civil rights movement; and
SJR48,2,109 Whereas, Rosa Parks went on to serve a distinguished 20-year career as a staff
10member to the honorable Congressman John Conyers of Michigan; and
SJR48,2,1311 Whereas, the lifetime achievements of Rosa Parks were recognized in 1996
12when she was honored with the Presidential Medal of Freedom; now, therefore, be
13it
SJR48,2,17 14Resolved by the senate, the assembly concurring, That the members of the
15Wisconsin legislature hereby honor Ms. Rosa Louise Parks for her lifelong dedication
16to equal rights for all citizens, for her positive impact on American history, and for
17the legacy of civil rights that she has left for us to defend.
SJR48,2,1818 (End)
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