WASHINGTON, Oct. 28, 2005

Capitol Honors OK'd For Rosa Parks

Late Civil Rights Hero Will Have Rare Public Viewing In Rotunda

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    One of the most famous icons of the civil rights movement has died. Byron Pitts reports on the enduring legacy of Rosa Parks, the woman who took a stand by refusing to give up her seat on the bus.

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    • Rosa Parks is escorted by E.D. Nixon, former president of the Alabama NAACP, on arrival at the courthouse in Montgomery March 19, 1956 for the trial in the racial bus boycott.

      Rosa Parks is escorted by E.D. Nixon, former president of the Alabama NAACP, on arrival at the courthouse in Montgomery March 19, 1956 for the trial in the racial bus boycott.  (AP (file))

    • Bus driver Charlotte Taylor looks back at a black ribbon placed over the first seat in memory of civil rights pioneer Rosa Parks, Thursday, Oct. 27, 2005, in Detroit.

      Bus driver Charlotte Taylor looks back at a black ribbon placed over the first seat in memory of civil rights pioneer Rosa Parks, Thursday, Oct. 27, 2005, in Detroit.  (AP)

    • Rosa Parks rides on the Montgomery Area Transit System bus in Alabama, in this undated photo. She was 42, a seamstress, when on Dec. 1, 1955, she defied segregation.

      Rosa Parks rides on the Montgomery Area Transit System bus in Alabama, in this undated photo. She was 42, a seamstress, when on Dec. 1, 1955, she defied segregation.  (AP (file))

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(CBS/AP)  Rosa Parks, the seamstress whose act of defiance on a public bus a half-century ago helped spark the modern U.S. civil rights movement, will join presidents and war heroes who have been honored in death with a public viewing in the Capitol Rotunda.

Parks, who died Monday in Detroit at age 92, also will be the first woman to lie in honor in the Rotunda, the vast circular room under the Capitol dome.

The House on Friday passed by voice vote a resolution allowing Parks to be honored in the Capitol on Sunday and Monday "so that the citizens of the United States may pay their last respects to this great American." The Senate approved the resolution Thursday night.

The viewing will extend from 6 p.m. Sunday afternoon until midnight and also run from 7 a.m. until 10 a.m. Monday.

It will be only the fifth time in the past two decades that a person has either laid in honor or in state in the Rotunda. The last to lie in state was President Ronald Reagan after his death in June last year.

The refusal by Parks, a black woman, to give up her bus seat to a white man in then-segregated Montgomery, Alabama, in 1955 led to a 381-day boycott of the city's bus system and helped ignite the modern civil rights movement.

"The movement that Rosa Parks helped launch changed not only our country, but the entire world, as her actions gave hope to every individual fighting for civil and human rights," said Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid. "We now can honor her in a way deserving of her contributions and legacy."

In most cases, only presidents, members of Congress and military commanders have been allowed to lie in the Rotunda.

Parks would be the first woman and second black American to receive the accolade. Jacob J. Chestnut, one of two Capitol police officers fatally shot in 1998, was the first black American to lie in honor, said Senate historian Richard Baker.

Parks also would be the second non-governmental official to be commemorated that way. The remains of Pierre L'Enfant — the French-born architect who was responsible for the design of Washington, D.C. — stopped at the Capitol in 1909, long after his death in 1825.

"Rosa Parks is not just a national hero, she is the embodiment of our social and human conscience and the spark that lit the flame of liberty and equality for African Americans and minority groups in this country and around the globe," said Sen. Christopher Dodd, a Democrat.

Officials with the Rosa & Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development in Detroit said at one point that Parks would lie in repose at the Lincoln Memorial. The National Park Service, however, said those plans were never formalized.

Continued



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