San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Desire to take seat helped start Louisiana bus boycotts in 1953

MARTHA WHITE 1922-2021

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Martha White, whose actions helped start the 1953 bus boycotts in Louisiana’s capital city, has died. She was 99.

White died Saturday, her family and others confirmed.

White, then 31, was working as a housekeepe­r in the capital city of Baton Rouge in 1953 when she took action. After a long day of walking to and from work while seeking to reach her bus stop, she decided to sit in one of the only bus seats available — one designated for white passengers.

When the driver ordered her to get up, White refused and another Black woman sat beside her in solidarity. The bus driver threatened to have the women arrested. Ultimately police, the bus company manager and a civil rights activist, the Rev. T.J. Jemison, showed up. Jemison informed the driver of a recently passed ordinance to desegregat­e buses in the city, meaning White wasn’t violating any rules.

In response to the ordinance, bus drivers began a strike and the ordinance was later overturned. That prompted a boycott by the Black community in Baton Rouge.

Baton Rouge Mayor Sharon Weston Broome issued a statement Monday recognizin­g White’s contributi­on to the city’s civil rights movement.

“Martha White undoubtedl­y shaped our community in Baton Rouge, and communitie­s across our nation,” Broome said. “We honor her legacy today and every day.”

That boycott later helped provide the framework for the famous effort sparked by Rosa Parks that led to a bus boycott in Montgomery, Alabama, in 1955.

Ted Jemison, the son of the Rev. T.J. Jemison, remembered White as being outspoken and unafraid to share her opinion. He told The Advocate of a conversati­on he had with her years ago about that day. He recalled her telling him she just wanted to sit in that bus seat because she was tired from being on her feet constantly that day.

“‘Can you imagine working on your feet all day and just wanting to sit down?’ ” Jemison recalled White as saying. “She was the same way from when she was young to when she was 90 years old. She knew that what she did was for the good of everyone in Baton Rouge.”

“We really lost a true pioneer for civil rights,” said Jason Roberts, coowner of the Baton Rouge African American Museum, speaking of White’s death, the newspaper reported.

“She knew that what she did was for the good of everyone in Baton Rouge.” Ted Jemison, son of the Rev. T.J. Jemison, on Martha White

 ?? Carol Anne Blitzer / Associated Press 2005 ?? Martha White, seen in 2005, took a stand by sitting in a seat designated for whites in 1953 in Baton Rouge, La.
Carol Anne Blitzer / Associated Press 2005 Martha White, seen in 2005, took a stand by sitting in a seat designated for whites in 1953 in Baton Rouge, La.

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