Images of Rosa Parks Library and Museum
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A well-presented museum about the Civil Rights movement - specifically, about the woman who is often called its mother.
History & Anthropology Person & Artist Historic house
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252 Montgomery Street, Montgomery
No exhibitions in Rosa Parks Library and Museum have been found.
Rosa Parks Library and Museum has 2 ratings.
The Rosa Parks Library and Museum in Montgomery, Alabama, offers visitors an informative experience centered on the Civil Rights Movement. The museum effectively covers the story of Rosa Parks and her pivotal role in the Montgomery Bus Boycott. Exhibits include a reconstructed 1950s-era bus and multimedia presentations that help bring the historical events to life. Many visitors appreciate the educational value, especially for students and those seeking to understand this crucial period in American history. The museum, while small, is well-organized and provides a powerful narrative of the civil rights struggle. Some visitors note that the experience can be completed in about an hour, which may leave those expecting a more extensive museum wanting more. The staff is generally described as knowledgeable and friendly, enhancing the overall visit. However, a few reviewers mention that some exhibits could benefit from updates or maintenance. Despite its compact size, the museum effectively conveys the importance of Rosa Parks' actions and the broader civil rights movement, making it a worthwhile stop for those interested in American history.
We visited Troy University's Rosa Parks Museum in Montgomery, AL on Jan 7, 2026 as part of Road Scholar's "The Civil Rights Movement - Atlanta, Montgomery, Selma, Birmingham" program. As the name indicates, this museum is entirely about the titular civil rights icon. Tickets were covered by our program. We spent less than an hour here, in part because we got two other sites to visit in our day's itinerary.
Our tour guide informed us that photography was not allowed inside the exhibition rooms. (Judging by the content on this business listing, that didn't stop other visitors from taking photos.) In the first room, we saw a short film that summarizes the segregation in Montgomery prior to Parks' historic act. After that, we went another room and were standing in front of a bus modeled after the one that Parks boarded and refused to give up her seat. The bus's windows serves as screens for another short film that re-enacted the historic moment. The dialogue is boosted by surround sound all over the room so that visitors could feel what it was like at that moment. After that, we went into the third and final room of exhibits showing what happened after Parks' arrest and its impact on the Civil Rights Movement. I recalled life-size figures, a model of a 1950s car and dimmed lighting.
(Many thanks to Lulu Wang and her article "Rosa Parks Museum: Take You Back to 1955, Montgomery, AL" in medium.com for helping with my recollections.)
The museum is clearly focused on Rosa Parks the civil rights icon, but not Rosa Parks the person, family member and human being. To my recollection, there was little mention about her life before and after the bus boycott (and the larger Civil Rights Movement). Nor was there a mention of the asteroid named after her: 284996 Rosaparks. I learnt about that from a "Doctor Who" episode (series 11, episode 3, titled "Rosa").
I don't recall if the exhibits mention of Parks' prior encounter with the bus driver James Blake 12 years earlier. After paying her fare at the front entrance, she tried to enter through the back entrance. But Blake drove off without her. Some accounts claimed that she refused to board. It'd be nice to know what's the museum's take on that incident.
Of the three Montgomery mini-sites about the Civil Rights movement - the other two being the Civil Rights Memorial Center and the Freedom Rides Museum - the Rosa Parks museum is the smallest in space and content, and the only one that does not allow photography. I was the least happy with it. It's certainly worth the visit if done in conjunction with the Civil Rights Memorial Center and the Freedom Rides Museum, both of which are within walking distance. In addition to that, go see the Rosa Parks statue at the Rosa Parks Bus Stop on Court Square, which is also within walking distance.
Visited on Jan 7, 2026
This rating is based on the rating of this museum on several other platforms.
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