Huebert, while we hear of an ordinary black woman's spontaneous refusal to give up her seat in the "colored" section of a city-owned bus to a white man, I've always been interested in the official story's inattention to all the facts.
From from being an anonymous working woman, Mrs. Parks had been secretary of the local NAACP for 12 years, and only months before the famous incident, had trained at the Highlander School in Tennessee in civil disobedience. She was employed as a seamstress by Cliff and Virginia Durr, Montgomery's leading white liberals, who thought she would make a perfect test case. For more, see Bearing the Cross, David Garrow's civil rights history.
None of this means Mrs. Parks wasn't brave to refuse to be humiliated by the government, and to face jail instead. But it does show us, once again, how little we can trust what we're told.