Parks was born in 1903 in
Wedowee, Alabama, the son of David Parks and Geri Culbertson. He did not receive a formal education as there was no nearby black school where he lived. Parks spent much of his childhood caring for ill family members and was orphaned as a teenager.
Civil rights activism Parks was politically active, a member of the
League of Women Voters, and active member of the
NAACP. He was involved in leading the national pledge drive in support of the legal defense of the
Scottsboro Boys, a group of nine young Black men falsely accused of raping two White women. Parks was also a charter member of the Montgomery NAACP and was heavily involved in the Montgomery labor rights movement, supporting efforts to unionize day laborers in the city. after his boss forbade him to talk about his wife or the legal case. == Personal life ==