New: 2013 Guided Tour Schedule - Take a trip with experts
Alabama
Red Tails: Tuskegee - Where Heroes First Flew
The Tuskegee Airmen indeed were a heroic cadre of World War II pilots that were never supposed to get off the ground. And even if they found glory over the skies of Europe, perhaps the most significant part of their story unfolded in Alabama.
Buckle up and learn more here.
Albany, Georgia
The city where King failed - and freedom sang
Most civil rights memorials celebrate victories.
Albany, Ga., is different.
Unlike Montgomery or Greensboro, there was no triumph here. This is the city where Martin Luther King Jr. lost. He couldn't even manage to stay in jail. But his failure in 1961 to integrate this southwest Georgia city played a crucial role in the progress of the Civil Rights Movement. King learned from his mistakes and honed his protest strategies.
It's also the city where the Civil Rights struggle literally found its voice. This is where a group of female performers, The Freedom Singers. was formed. One of the original members leads a stirring monthly concert of protest songs that will literally have you on your feet vowing that "We Shall Overcome." (Watch a video clip below).
Sing along and learn more here.
Mississippi
The Help: Visit sites from the movie - and history
The best-selling novel and film, The Help, introduces viewers to a slice of Mississippi life unknown to most. As the Civil Rights Era began to boil over, black maids were still working inside the homes of whites, raising their children - and learning their secrets
Filming took place in Mississippi, and the main host cities - Greenwood and Jackson - are eager to guide visitors to locations from the movie and novel. But the areas were also home to some of the most violent moments of the civil rights era, and they can be visited too.
Explore both worlds here.
Washington, D.C.
How to get tickets for MLK Memorial dedication
Maybe you weren't there for the March on Washington and Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech. You can make up for it this August by attending the dedication of the King memorial in Washington.
The Aug. 28 event takes place on the 48th anniversary of Dr. King's famous address. It will include a concert and speeches. The memorial will immediately become a must-see see Washington site, and decades later you'll be able to say "I was there the day it opened." A special website has details on the dedication ceremony.
The memorial will be located in West Potomac Park in line with the Lincoln and Jefferson memorials. For more information, visit the MLK memorial website..
Tuscaloosa, Alabama
The Stand in the Schoolhouse Door
When Alabama Gov. George Wallace positioned himself defiantly at the entrance to a University of Alabama gymnasium, he created a moment and phrase that still echoes half a century later.
Read more about the Stand in the Schoolhouse Door here.
Oxford, Mississippi
The Battle of Ole Miss
These days Oxford, Miss., is best known as genteel southern college town, the former home to writers John Grisham and William Faulkner. It evokes the scent of magnolias, and the roar of the crowd at a University of Mississippi football game. But in 1962, it was quite a different atmosphere. And the roars were from mobs of protesters, furious that an African-American student was planning to enroll. Before it was over, federal troops were called in, hundreds were injured, and two had died. All so James Meredith could go to school.
Read more about the Battle of Oxford here.
Farmville, Virginia
A Forgotten Teenage Civil Rights Hero
We all know the civil rights giants. Martin, Rosa and Malcolm don't even require a last name.
But here's one you've probably never heard of: Barbara Johns.
The 15 year-old Virginia high school student launched a protest that ultimately reached the U.S. Supreme Court. For five years, the public schools in Prince Edward County, Va., simply shut down because they refused to mix black and white students. The remarkable story -- largely unknown today even in Virginia -- is told at a modest but growing museum in Farmville, Va., about 65 miles southwest of Richmond.
Read more about the amazing struggle here.
Greensboro, N.C.
A Sit-In that Tore Down Segregation
Four college dorm-mates just wanted to sit down and order a cup of coffee and a glazed doughnut. By the time they were finally served months later, they had introduced the phrase "sit-in" to the dictionary and helped demolish Jim Crow laws across the South.
Read more about the nation's newest civil rights museum here.
Selma's Violent March into History
Only 54 miles separate Selma and Montgomery, but that span helped changed history. The march to Montgomery is now preserved as a National Historic Trail, complete with markers and memorials. Read more here.

Top six cities for Dr. Martin Luther King history
No other name is so closely linked to the Civil Rights movement. A Civil Rights traveler can visit the most important Civil Rights sites just by touring the cities where Dr. King lived and made history.
Atlanta
Dr. King's story begins and ends in Atlanta. Visit the National Park Service's King site, his home pulpit, and his gravesite. Read more here.
Montgomery, Alabama
The Alabama capital was where Dr. King first became a pastor, and a historic figure. Visit his home, learn about his role in the bus boycott, and honor him and other victims of the civil rights struggle at a moving memorial. Read more here.
Washington, D.C.
Dr. King made international headlines during the March on Washington. Visit the site of his stirring address at the Lincoln Memorial. Read more here.
Birmingham, Alabama
See the cell where the Dr. King wrote his famous Letter from Birmingham jail. Confront police dogs captured in mid-attack, visit the church where four girls were murdered in Sunday school. Read more here.
Selma, Alabama
Walk across the Edmund Pettus bridge, site of the last significant confrontation of the Civil Rights era. Visit a museum and read recollections of participants. Take a city tour and see where Dr. King galvanized marchers. Read more here.
Memphis, Tennessee
As Dr. King had predicted, he never lived to see the country's racial wounds healed. Visit the motel room where he was gunned down. Read more here.





