What are some advantages that Juliette Morgan had while growing up in Montgomery, Alabama?
Morgan was a seventh-generation Southerner and a third-generation Alabamian. She was born into a family with high status, had famous friends (Fitzgerald and was an author and Bankhead a Hollywood celebrity) and went to the best schools. She held a master’s degree and had a job. 2. What one thing separated Morgan from her privileged friends? Why was it important to her story? She had anxiety attacks and couldn’t drive. It’s important to her story because she rode the city buses and saw how the white bus drivers treated blacks. 3. What were ways white bus drivers dehumanized black passengers? After paying their fare, blacks had to walk out the front door of the bus and re-enter through the back door. Blacks had to give up their seats to any white people who entered. Blacks had to sit in the back of the bus. Some white bus drivers called them names. 4. What did Morgan do every time she saw a black passenger mistreated? How did people respond? Morgan would pull the emergency cord to stop t