Montgomery Bus Boycott, 1955
Committed to black civil rights at an early age, Martin Luther King Jr. became a member of Executive Committee of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, a supreme organization of its kind in the nation. In December 1955, King led the boycott of Montgomery's segregated buses, which lasted for 385 days. During the campaign, he received threats over the phone as well as via mails. The situation got so intensified that eventually, King was arrested and his house was bombed. The campaign was concluded in 1956, with Supreme Court outlawing racial discrimination in public transport. Eventually, Montgomery public buses started operating on desegregated basis. Martin Luther King Jr. emerged as a prominent civil-rights leader after the success of the bus boycott.