Irene Morgan Kirkaldy, 90, who died of Alzheimer's disease August 10 at her home in Gloucester, Virginia, quietly changed history in 1944 when she refused to give up her seat on a crowded Greyhound bus to a white couple. Her case resulted in a landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision outlawing segregation in interstate transportation and sparked the first Freedom Ride in 1947.
Mrs. Kirkaldy's defiance of the discriminatory Jim Crow laws of Virginia came 11 years before Rosa Parks's similar act in Montgomery, Alabama, galvanized the civil rights movement and made her a national icon. Without fanfare, Mrs. Kirkaldy's early case provided a winning strategy for fighting racial segregation in the courts.
Read this inspiring story of a true American hero in full here.
I was blown away by this story. She literally fought back against the police officer who tried to arrest her. I wonder with amazed admiration, what in her experience would prompt her to confront what was, at that time, the norm? I don't think she was crazy, I think she was brave. I want the vision and spirit of Irene Morgan to confront without apology the injustices of our day. Thank you Ms. Irene Morgan Kirkaldy for your life of faith and service and your brave actions on that day. Rest in peace.