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Change, Not Charity: The Americans with Disabilities Act | Article

The Iconic Civil Rights Protest You Don't Know

Meet the protesters who crawled their way into history—and changed how all Americans live

A black-and-white photograph captures a mother embracing a young girl with disabilities. They kneel on a textured surface. The girl wears a bandana around her forehead and has an expression of determination and joy. In the background, several people, incl
One of the Capitol Crawl’s youngest participants was eight-year-old Jennifer Keelan, whose mother congratulated her when she reached the top. Photo by Tom Olin.

Imagine climbing up 83 steps. Perhaps that doesn’t seem like such a big deal—but that’s likely because you’d be walking. What would you do, though, if you couldn’t? 

That was the premise behind the Capitol Crawl, a now-iconic protest to demand the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act. The ADA was a landmark civil rights bill aimed at providing basic amenities and protections to some 40 million mentally and physically disabled citizens. Today we take many of the ADA’s changes to society—curb cuts in sidewalks and closed captioning on entertainment, to name just two examples—for granted. But the act’s passage, in 1990, was anything but guaranteed.

By spring of that year, the ADA had been trapped in legislative limbo for months. Despite the strong support of then-President George H.W. Bush, the act was languishing in Congress, caught in the deliberations of House subcommittees. Many U.S. Representatives balked at the expense and complication posed by the ADA’s requirements.

A black-and-white photograph captures a large group of disability rights activists participating in a protest march. Many individuals are using wheelchairs, while others walk alongside them. The protesters are carrying various signs and banners, including
A stream of protestors make their way from the White House to the U.S. Capitol during the ADAPT-led protest on March 12, 1990. Photo by Tom Olin.

Enter ADAPT—American Disabled for Accessible Public Transit—a grassroots disability rights organization that had been staging protests across the country even before its official founding in 1983. On March 12, 1990, ADAPT led a procession of more than 500 marchers, including other disability activists and lobbyists, from the White House to the west side of the U.S. Capitol. There, in the kind of guerrilla civic action for which the organization had become known, scores of marchers dropped to the ground and began the long journey up the hard marble stairs leading to the “People’s House.” They climbed backwards or on their hands and knees, step-by-painstaking-step. “As I’m seeing the people around me,” recalled Anita Cameron, one of the ADAPT activists who made her way up that day, “I'm like, ‘whoa, we are doing it. We are really doing it. We’re, like, crawling into history.’” 

A black-and-white photograph shows individuals with physical disabilities climbing the steps of the U.S. Capitol building. Many of them have abandoned their mobility aids, such as crutches, and are crawling up the stairs with their hands and knees. In the
Though the temperature during the Capitol Crawl was in the 80s, protestors sweated their way to the top. Photo by Tom Olin.

Rolled up in their pockets, protestors carried copies of the Declaration of Independence. Once they finally summitted the stairs, ADAPT reps delivered those scrolls to members of Congress as a reminder of the ADA’s importance. And while media coverage of the event wasn’t extensive, but the publicity that was garnered by the Crawl was impactful. “The pictures were striking,” said The New York Times several days later, “just as they were intended to be: Children paralyzed from the waist down crawling up the steps of the Capitol.” Six months later, following the bill’s now-remarkably swift passage through the House, President George H. W. Bush signed the ADA into law. 

A black-and-white photograph shows people with disabilities climbing the steps of the U.S. Capitol building. A person in the foreground, wearing a sweatshirt with the 'ADAPT' logo and patches, sits on a step and uses their hands and legs to ascend the sta
Protestors ascend the steps of the U.S. Capitol during the now-iconic Capitol Crawl protest on March 12, 1990. Photo by Tom Olin.

“We did it to show that we disabled people, as second class citizens, needed change. And the vehicle for how it was going to change was the ADA,” Cameron told American Experience, reflecting on the Capitol Crawl’s significance. “But I think a lot of people forget that the ADA was the floor. It was not the ceiling. So it was the beginning of rights for us, but it was not the end.”

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