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After Years In Lockdown, Rosa Parks' Papers Head To Library Of Congress

Rosa Parks, shown in Seattle in 1956, saved postcards from Martin Luther King Jr. and notes about carpooling during the Montgomery Bus Boycott. They're now being cataloged by the Library of Congress.
Gil Baker
/
Courtesy of the Library of Congress, Rosa & Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development
Rosa Parks, shown in Seattle in 1956, saved postcards from Martin Luther King Jr. and notes about carpooling during the Montgomery Bus Boycott. They're now being cataloged by the Library of Congress.

Archivists at the Library of Congress are hard at work cataloging the papers of Rosa Parks, received on loan recently after a legal battle kept them under lock and key for the past decade.

Rosa Parks, shown here in a photo from 1950, is famous as a "quiet seamstress" who refused to give up her bus seat — but a newly-available set of papers reveals a more animated voice, says an archives specialist working with the documents.
/ Courtesy of the Library of Congress, Rosa & Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development
/
Courtesy of the Library of Congress, Rosa & Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development
Rosa Parks, shown here in a photo from 1950, is famous as a "quiet seamstress" who refused to give up her bus seat — but a newly-available set of papers reveals a more animated voice, says an archives specialist working with the documents.

Among the collection are a receipt for a voting booth's poll tax, postcards from Martin Luther King Jr., a datebook with the names of volunteer carpool drivers who would help blacks get to work during the Montgomery Bus Boycott and thousands of other historic documents.

Meg McAleer, a senior archives specialist working on Rosa Parks' papers, spoke with NPR's Audie Cornish about the documents. Excerpts are below — but to get Parks' full recipe for feather-light pancakes, you'll have to listen to the audio above.


Interview Highlights

A rare photo of Raymond Parks is part of the Rosa Parks collection that will be on display at the Library of Congress in March.
Christina Cala / NPR
/
NPR
A rare photo of Raymond Parks is part of the Rosa Parks collection that will be on display at the Library of Congress in March.

On Rosa Parks' husband, Raymond

Actually, photographs of Raymond Parks are really rare. This is a photograph of Raymond Parks when he's in his 40s. He's, you know, a strikingly handsome man. Very very pale complexion, and at first Rosa Parks didn't like that when they were dating. She said that he was the first activist she ever knew in person. He was involved in the Montgomery branch of the NAACP, and at the time of their marriage he was very involved in organizing on behalf of the Scottsboro Boys, and in fact were holding meetings in their new home together, which is quite a dangerous thing to do.

Rosa Parks' poll tax receipt from 1957. Even after achieving the right to vote, many hurdles like the poll tax were imposed to prevent African-Americans from voting.
/ Courtesy of the Library of Congress, Rosa & Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development
/
Courtesy of the Library of Congress, Rosa & Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development
Rosa Parks' poll tax receipt from 1957. Even after achieving the right to vote, many hurdles like the poll tax were imposed to prevent African-Americans from voting.

An excerpt from a letter Parks wrote about Raymond's reaction to her arrest

"He was a madman, furious. His fury was directed at himself for being a financial failure — not having provided the material comforts necessary for a well-appointed home. He was angry with the driver for causing my arrest. He mentioned so often the fact that colored people were sitting on the same seat, the same day, and all of the other days, where I was arrested for not getting up. He also was very angry with me for refusing to give up the seat, and at least not getting off the bus. So many times he said he would have gotten off the bus. He said I had a goat head."

An undated recipe for "featherlite" pancakes, written in Parks' hand, is also part of the archive.
/ Courtesy of the Library of Congress, Rosa & Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development
/
Courtesy of the Library of Congress, Rosa & Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development
An undated recipe for "featherlite" pancakes, written in Parks' hand, is also part of the archive.

On how Rosa and Raymond Parks struggled following her arrest

Rosa Parks — because of her arrest, because of her activism — loses her job at the Montgomery Fair department store, where she was an assistant tailor. She wasn't fired, they just let her go. And Raymond Parks also loses his job as well. And neither one of them is able to find sustainable employment in Montgomery after that — because of their activism, absolutely. They are basically boycotted. ...

This is a 1955 tax return, and of course her arrest is in December of that year, and their combined income is $3,749. So they're, you know, the working poor, but they're holding their head above water. And here is their tax return in 1959 when they're living in Detroit. Their combined income is $661. They have descended into deep, deep poverty.

Meg McAleer, senior archives specialist at the Library of Congress, works with the Rosa Parks Collection in the Manuscript Room at James Madison Memorial Building of the Library.
Christina Cala / NPR
/
NPR
Meg McAleer, senior archives specialist at the Library of Congress, works with the Rosa Parks Collection in the Manuscript Room at James Madison Memorial Building of the Library.

On how the archives alter the perception of Rosa Parks

You know, we think of her as the quiet seamstress, and her writing just absolutely blew me away — the strength of it, the power of it, the courage of it. I mean, she's writing things down about the way things are in the South in ways that could get her killed, and she's unflinching in how she does it. ...

It really kind of lets us hear her voice in a way that I don't think we've truly heard before. ... We know her actions, you know, we know the fact she refused to give up her seat, we know about her arrest, we know the whats. But this brings us into the psychological impact of that. We see her in a much more animated way — we know the events she attended, you know, who she was supporting, and so I think that this really shows her to be a very skilled, experienced civil rights worker.

Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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Over two decades of journalism, Audie Cornish has become a recognized and trusted voice on the airwaves as co-host of NPR's flagship news program, All Things Considered.