Respuesta :
the impacts of the boycott, led by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., were simply just: civil rights.
Black men and women that already worked at low paying jobs, did not want to deal with the stress of being told what to do and how to do it, especially on their way to or from work.
The bus boycott act led to no more public discrimination, therefore blacks would be able to sit next to whites on buses, BUT the bus stops had white and black SECTIONS.
Due to the acts of MLK, after his assassination, caused a great impact on the lives of African Americans all over the States.
Black men and women that already worked at low paying jobs, did not want to deal with the stress of being told what to do and how to do it, especially on their way to or from work.
The bus boycott act led to no more public discrimination, therefore blacks would be able to sit next to whites on buses, BUT the bus stops had white and black SECTIONS.
Due to the acts of MLK, after his assassination, caused a great impact on the lives of African Americans all over the States.
The boycott ended segregation on Montgomery buses.
The boycott led to violence against African-Americans in Montgomery.
The boycott showed African Americans that they had some support in the white community.
The boycott invited a sense of personal power to African Americans.
The boycott gave national attention to the Civil Rights Movement.