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U.S. Civil Rights Trail: An Essential Journey

The fight for American civil rights spanned decades, cities and states—from Topeka, Kansas, all the way to Washington, D.C. The U.S. Civil Rights Trail allows groups to chart the course of the movement and embark on a journey of meaningful discovery while ensuring the true stories that changed history are never lost.

With more than 100 locations to visit across 15 states, the U.S. Civil Rights Trail offers groups places to see and things to do at every designated location. Additionally, the trail's website provides in-depth explorations and resources specifically created so those who are following the journey can experience destinations or events in a more comprehensive way.

From walking the same path voting rights activists took in 1965 during the marches from Selma to Montgomery to discovering the centuries-long fight for racial equality at the National Civil Rights Museum, groups have an unprecedented opportunity to examine the events that changed history and remember the pioneers who spearheaded the movement.

The trail marked its one-year anniversary on January 21, 2019—Martin Luther King Jr. Day—and includes museums, churches, courthouses, memorials and other places that were pivotal to the advancement of social equality during the volatile 1950s and 1960s.This year, five historic civil rights sites in Florida and a national memorial that honors victims of lynching in the South were added to the trail. The Florida landmarks are in St. Augustine, Sarasota, Mims, Vero Beach and Panama City, while The National Memorial for Peace and Justice is in Montgomery, Alabama.

Consider adding these top 10 U.S. Civil Rights Trail destinations—as chosen by Travel South USA—to your itinerary:

MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE
National Civil Rights Museum at the Lorraine Motel
Visit the site where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated while in town to support black sanitation workers' demands for fair wages. Exhibits range from the arrest of Rosa Parks and other major events during the civil rights period to contemporary topics. It is the most-visited civil rights museum in America.

ATLANTA, GEORGIA
Martin Luther King Jr. National Historic Site
This site includes Ebenezer Baptist Church and the birth home of Dr. King.

National Center for Civil and Human Rights
This multicultural center contains exhibits on the civil rights movement and on modern human rights movements.

BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA
Birmingham Civil Rights Institute
Take a self-guided tour of this multimedia museum that features 58,000 square feet of exhibits, archives, galleries and community rooms.

16th Street Baptist Church
16th Street Baptist Church is still an active church in the Birmingham community, despite its tragic past. The church was bombed in 1963, resulting in the death of four young black girls. This event galvanized the federal government to take action on civil rights legislation.

SELMA, ALABAMA
Civil Rights Memorial
Visit a moving tribute to those who died in the civil rights struggle between 1954 and 1968.

Dexter Avenue King Memorial Baptist Church
The first church where Dr. King was a pastor, Dexter Avenue Church hosted meetings to organize the Montgomery Bus Boycott, which the U.S. Supreme Court eventually supported.

WASHINGTON, D.C.
National Museum of African American History and Culture
The latest museum of the Smithsonian Institution, it houses over 36,000 artifacts and features exhibits dedicated entirely to the African-American experience.

Supreme Court of the United States
Visit the site of the landmark ruling in Brown v. Board of Education, which made it illegal to segregate public educational facilities.

GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA
International Civil Rights Center & Museum (Woolworth's)
This museum commemorates the Greensboro Four and their role in launching the sit-in movement that inspired peaceful demonstrations across the country.

JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI
Mississippi Civil Rights Museum
The only state-sponsored civil rights museum in the nation, Mississippi Civil Rights Museum and the adjoining Museum of Mississippi History opened to celebrate the state's bicentennial.

Medgar Evers Home Museum
Visit the home and assassination site of the first NAACP field secretary and prominent civil rights activist and organizer.

LITTLE ROCK, ARKANSAS
Little Rock Central High School National Historic Site
This National Historic Site and still-functioning school houses a civil rights museum and offers ranger-led tours that commemorate the Little Rock Nine, who were symbols of courage in the fight against segregation.

NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE
Griggs Hall at American Baptist College
Erected in 1923, Griggs Hall preserves the legacy of Sutton E. Griggs, the first president of the college and a minister, novelist and civil rights activist.

Davidson County Courthouse
This was the site of the civil rights march that motivated Mayor Ben West to concede that segregation was immoral and that lunch counters in the city should be integrated.

Written by Sarah Suydam, Staff Writer for Groups Today.

Photo courtesy of U.S. Civil Right Trail.

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