Jackie Robinson Research Paper

Words: 844
Pages: 4

Civil rights icons Imagine you're sitting on the couch in the 1960s and you turn on the baseball game. Then you see Jackie Robinson, the first person to break the color barrier for the MLB. You're so surprised that you go to the news to see if there is anyone talking about him. Instead, you see a woman (Rosa Parks) getting arrested for not standing up after a white man told her to, and people got inspired to boycott all buses. You are just so surprised that you turn off the TV and go to the library and see a book called the Biography of Harriet Tubman. You don't know who that is, so you start to read it. You learn how she freed around 70 or more people who were enslaved and beaten because she knew it was wrong and knew she had to help in some …show more content…
They were some of the building blocks of the civil rights movement and did so much for all African Americans. Let me tell you about the people that had to deal with hate and racism so people could drink out of the same water fountain. First, Jackie Robinson was one of the most important people in civil rights for breaking the color barrier for the white baseball, or in other words, the MLB. "The player would also have to be able to withstand racist treatment," Rickey met with Robinson and was impressed with his courage as well as his skills on the field. He said, "Jackie knew it was bigger than him and needed to do this for the African American people." That player would also have to be able to withstand racist treatment. Rickey met with Robinson and was impressed with his courage as well as his skills on the field. He said he knew it was bigger than him and needed to do this for the African American people. He was immediately successful as a player, but he faced continual racial slurs from the crowds and other ballplayers, including some of his own …show more content…
The whole thing was bigger than me." This proves that he knows that he is an experiment and still keeps trying and trying for his people and family. Then, Rosa Parks showed people that they could stand up (or should I say sit down) to a white man and do what she pleases. By refusing to give up her bus seat to a white man in Montgomery, Alabama, she helped spark the American civil rights movement. She was tired of giving up her stuff/seat and giving in, so she prevailed. Parks served as secretary of the Montgomery chapter of the NAACP to help people get justice for her family, who also has experience with racist people. Parks’s arrest motivated local Black leaders to take action. Emerging civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr., led a boycott of the bus company that lasted more than a year to help the civil rights movement, which showed that standing up will work. Later they made buses desegregated. Last, Harriet Tubman freed 70 or more people and was a hero to the people and a big motivation to escape the owner/master of the slaves. She helped enslaved African Americans to flee to free states in the North and to Canada along the Underground Railroad. She would work at night and never lose anyone and not be