Anyway, decades before Rosa Parks and the dark skin sista Claudette Colvin were born, this D.C born teacher and activist Barbara E. Pope(photo below) challenged segregated transportation when she refused to leave the "whites-only" compartment of a passenger train in 1906.
In August 1906, Pope boarded a train at Union Station in Washington, D.C., bound for Virginia. Finding the designated "colored" car cramped and inferior, she took a seat in the main compartment.
Once the train crossed the Potomac River into Virginia, a white conductor ordered her to move. When she refused twice, she was threatened with arrest, forcibly removed, and arrested at the Falls Church station.
Backed by the W.E.B. Du Bois-led Niagara Movement, Pope successfully appealed her conviction. The Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals annulled the verdict, establishing that Virginia's separate-car law did not apply to interstate travelers. She later filed a civil suit against the railway company. While a jury found in her favor in June 1907, she was symbolically awarded only one cent in damages. Pope's lawsuits were not viewed favorably by her family. She suffered from insomnia for many months in 1908, and moved to Winchester, Virginia in June in hopes of recovering there. On September 5, 1908, Barbara Pope committed suicide by hanging herself. Very sad!!! Her family were like how dare she challenged the status quo.
What I found strange was that Rosa Parks came in 49 years later and done the same thing and she was backed by Martin Luther King civil rights movement in the South. One backed by W.E.B Dubois and the other backed by MLK 49 yrs later.

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