GROUP TRAVEL LEADER THE
DESTINATION DISHES | WHERE BOURBON BEGINS | MONTANA’S GLACIAL GRANDEUR MARCH 2023 LOUISIANA IN Hearing is believing FOOD & SPIRITS ISSUE 2023 TRAVEL
GUIDE
The Blue Whale of Catoosa
Pryor Creek Bridge
Ed Galloway’s Totem Pole Park
Will Rogers Museum
Unique Shopping
J.M. Davis Arms & Historical Museum
Home of Oklahoma’s Favorite Chicken Fried Steak
Relax at one of our many Hotels, Motels, Bed & Breakfasts and RV Parks
ArkEncounter.com/groups Williamstown, KY (south of Cincinnati) An attraction of Answers in Genesis
TOUR BIGGER
4 kyle@grouptravelleader.com KYLE ANDERSON 859.253.0455 The GROUP TRAVEL LEADER is published ten times a year by THE GROUP TRAVEL LEADER, Inc., 301 East High St., Lexington, Kentucky 40507, and is distributed free of charge to qualified group leaders who plan travel for groups of all ages and sizes. THE GROUP TRAVEL LEADER serves as the official magazine of GROUP TRAVEL FAMILY, the organization for traveling groups. All other travel suppliers, including tour operators, destinations, attractions, transportation companies, hotels, restaurants and other travel-related companies may subscribe to THE GROUP TRAVEL LEADER by sending a check for $59 for one year to: THE GROUP TRAVEL LEADER, Circulation Department, 301 East High St., Lexington, KY 40507. Phone (859) 2530455 or (859) 253-0503. Copyright THE GROUP TRAVEL LEADER, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction of editorial or graphic content in any manner without the written consent of the publisher is prohibited. MAC T. LACY Founder and Publisher CHARLES A. PRESLEY Partner BRIAN JEWELL VP & Executive Editor HERBERT SPARROW Senior Writer DONIA SIMMONS Creative Director ASHLEY RICKS Graphic Design & Circulation KYLE ANDERSON Director of Sales & Marketing BRYCE WILSON Advertising Account Manager RACHEL CRICK Writer & Project Coordinator SARAH SECHRIST Controller RENA BAER Copy Editor CONTENTS ON THE COVER A jazz trumpeter entertains travelers in New Orleans’ French Quarter. Photo by Christian Heeb. TRAVEL LEADER THE GROUP VOL 32 | ISSUE 3 6 Editor’s Marks COLUMNS NEWS 8 Family Matters 10 Conference Scene 18 Louisiana Spotlight 28 Kentucky Bourbon Country 12 Signature Dishes CHARTING THE EVOLUTION OF GROUP TRAVEL 68 Towns on the Trail 94 Tasting History 78 Civil Rights Museums 58 Education Heroes 86 Personal Stories FOOD & SPIRITS ISSUE
Download the full six-day Route 66 itinerary, plus more sample itineraries, at TravelOK.com/Group.
Ready to roam Route 66? Start at Will Rogers Memorial Museum in Claremore, a tribute to the life and legacy of the world-renowned humorist, writer, actor and trick roper. Then, hit the hay at 21C Museum Hotel in Oklahoma City — a boutique hotel, art gallery and restaurant in one! Next, refuel with classic diner fare at Lucille’s Roadhouse in Weatherford. And be sure to snap a photo at the original filling station just a few miles up the road! Finish up at Oklahoma Route 66 Museum in Clinton, known for its array of Americana flair, classic cars and the “world’s largest curio cabinet.”
EDITOR’S MARKS
BY BRIAN JEWELL
No one ever told Andrae Marable it was impossible to get Gen X travelers on group tours. Maybe that’s why he was successful in doing so.
Marable is the founder of the Pack Roadtrip Travel Club, an up-and-coming tour company based in the Hampton Roads area of Virginia. He has built a loyal following of travelers in his area and beyond. And most of them range in age from 35 to 50.
This success bucks all the conventional wisdom: that group travel is only for students and seniors, that people in their prime working years don’t have time for travel, that millennials and Gen Xers are too independent to put their vacation plans in someone else’s hands. But Marable didn’t come up in the traditional tour industry — his professional background is in IT — so he never got the memo.
I met Marable on one of our OnSite familiarization tours in Louisiana this past fall and was fascinated to hear the story of how he grew a single trip with a group of coworkers into a thriving Gen X group tour company. I loved his story so much, in fact, that I invited him to be a featured guest on a recent episode of our podcast, Gather and Go. If you listen, you’ll hear all about the Pack, how he builds trips to appeal to younger travelers, how he uses low-cost ideas for effective marketing and how he makes travelers feel like family. You can find the episode wherever you listen to podcasts or at grouptravelleader.com/podcast
For those of us who have been involved in tourism for some time, it can be surprising to hear about someone succeeding in tours with an untapped demographic. But it shouldn’t. The fundamental value proposition of group travel is rock solid, and it doesn’t change with time or cultural fads.
In the early 2000s, a lot of doomsday prophets warned that baby boomers would never take motorcoach tours. Of course, those people turned out to be wrong, and today the boomer generation makes up the bedrock of the group travel customer base. I expect that within the next decade, we’ll hear some pessimistic people say the same things about Gen X. And I expect they’ll turn out to be wrong, too.
In every generation, there will be people who love the idea of travel but hate the hassle that comes with planning and executing it. There will be socially inclined people who want to share their travel experiences with friends. And there will be people who enjoy the VIP experiences they can get in a group but can’t get on their own.
That doesn’t mean that tourism will never change. Marable does things on his tours that you may not do on yours. But generational changes don’t have to be extinction events.
As you think about the future of your tour company, travel group or tourism attraction, it’s worth keeping people like Marable and his customers in mind. They may not come from the same generation you do, but they share your same passion for travel. They’re open to going in groups. And after having a group travel experience, many of them crave more.
Could you succeed in leading travel for people like them in your community? Or could you reach people your own age who have never traveled with a group before?
There’s only one way to find out.
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GTF VIDEO LIBRARY TOUTS DESTINATIONS FOR PLANNERS
SALEM, Ohio
Group travel is on the rise, and the travel planners making it happen are constantly searching for new ideas, trends and thoughts on how to better serve their clubs and organizations. The Group Travel Family of Brands has built a library of thousands of video interviews with industry leaders and travel clubs.
The Group Travel Family of Brands serves over 25,000 travel planners nationwide, with the mission of providing education, networking opportunities and content to better lead groups on trips. One of those avenues of providing content is the development of The Group Travel Family channel on YouTube.
“We have amassed a library of more than 2,000 videos that focus on group travel,” said Charlie Presley of The Group Travel Family of Brands.
The organization operates seven travel conferences annually that deal exclusively with group travel. The staff realized that
a wealth of shared information during those conferences simply evaporated after the gathering.
“That’s when we began a video library of keynote speeches, interviews and destination focuses,” said Presley. That effort resulted in content that has, to date, reached over a quarter million views.
Viewers visiting The Group Travel Family channel can select from a dozen playlists that segment group travel interests. Bank Clubs, church groups, mature and boomers, diversity travel as well as meeting planners will find content of interest. They also welcome the travel industry to view the library and gain insight into what groups are doing.
“This helps destinations, hotels and attractions in recognizing travel trends,” Presley said.
Travel planners and industry professionals are welcome to use this content free of charge by visiting the Group Travel Family Travel Library at youtube.com/grouptravelfamily
MEET WITH AATC PLANNERS IN CLEVELAND
SALEM, Ohio Destination Cleveland is hosting the African American Travel Conference (AATC), April 3–5 and is inviting the travel industry to join them in celebrating the diversity of group travel. AATC has led the travel industry in promotion of group travel for 25 years and has helped thousands of organizers plan better travel for their groups, clubs and even family reunions.
“It’s such an honor to help our delegates, the grass-roots organizers of group travel, succeed,” said Cassandra Blankenship of AATC.
Local sightseeing will be included, as well as interesting meal functions and events. Delegates of this year’s conference, held at Embassy Suites of Cleveland, will also meet with the event sponsors including Louisville Tourism, Greater Birmingham CVB, Chesapeake CVB, Visit Topeka and Destination Cleveland.
To attend, contact Blankenship at 800-628-0993 or cblankenship@grouptravelfamily.com.
8 MARCH 2023
MATTERS
FAMILY
LAZARUS WINS GTF CONFERENCE REGISTRATION AT ABA
SALEM, Ohio — The American Bus Association (ABA) held its annual Marketplace in Detroit, where group travel and motorcoach professionals gathered in what has become America’s premier tourism industry event. The Group Travel Family of Brands was present, with Jennifer Ferguson and Cassandra Blankenship joining a couple of thousand delegates.
One lucky ABA Marketplace delegate won a free registration to the Group Travel Family conference of their choice. That delegate is Bruce Lazarus of “His Story: The Musical.” Billed as “a theatrical event 2,000 years in the making,” the show is already generating buzz throughout the group travel industry.
Congratulations to Lazarus! For more information on “His Story: The Musical,” call 855-HISSTORY or email groups@ hisstorythemusical.com
AGRITOURISMWORLD CREATES ONLINE PORTAL FOR SITES
SALEM, Ohio Travel industry professionals interested in agritourism have a dedicated online portal accessible to travel groups looking for farms, markets and destinations that welcome visiting groups.
AgritourismWorld is a directory of over 3,000 destinations that include agritourism and welcome group visitors.
“We have a mission of helping people discover agritourism,” said Ben Everly of AgritourismWorld.
If you are a destination, farm or market involved in agritourism and welcome groups, you are invited to a free AgritourismWorld listing. Group travel leaders wanting to find farms should visit agritourismworld.com
9 GROUPTRAVELLEADER.COM
RETURN OF DRIVERS WOULD FUEL A MOTORCOACH TRAVEL RESURGENCE
BY BRIAN JEWELL
DETROIT— American Bus Association president and CEO Peter Pantuso opened the organization’s annual Marketplace by swearing off two words: “pandemic” and “COVID.”
“This week, I promise not to use the P word or the C word,” he told delegates at the event’s opening session. “Those words are over in my book. I’m done with them.”
That statement garnered an enthusiastic round of applause from attendees of the conference, which took place February 4–7 in Detroit. That enthusiasm pervaded many of the conversations that took place throughout the conference as well, as tour planners and travel industry representatives alike anticipated a very strong business environment in 2023.
“Last year, people were excited, but there was still a lot of caution,” Pantuso told The Group Travel Leader. “There was a lot of commiseration about the past two years and what everyone went through. But as they got through the year, travel just exploded. Every operator tells me the same thing — it went from 0 to 100 miles per hour overnight.”
As business came roaring back for tour and
motorcoach companies, so did the attendance numbers for ABA’s signature event.
“Last year, we had between 1,600 and 1,800 people on the Marketplace floor,” Pantuso said. “I think we’re looking at somewhere between 2,700 and 2,900 this year.”
In addition to an overall industry rebound, part of that attendance growth is attributable to ABA’s partnership with Busworld, a group that organizes motorcoach industry trade shows around the world, to host the inaugural Busworld North America show in conjunction with the ABA Marketplace. Whereas the ABA gathering is traditionally focused on the tour and travel aspect of the motorcoach industry, Busworld added exhibits and education for operations and logistics professionals.
“We already represent all segments of the industry — the travel, tour and motorcoach sides,” Pantuso said. “So we had one coordinated effort to put on two shows. We coordinated the scheduling, decorating, messaging and getting the word out to some of the same people and some different people.”
While Marketplace and Busworld North
America attendees were optimistic about business prospects, they also grappled with challenges facing the industry. This included a shortage of motorcoach drivers, which was already a problem before the pandemic.
“We’re releasing a study we did on the driver shortage issue,” Pantuso said. “It shows that in round numbers there are about 30,000 drivers in the United States, but we’re down about 7,300 from before 2020. That’s about 25% short of the drivers we need. There’s rarely a coach company I talk to that doesn’t say they left business on the table in 2022. I was talking to a small operator the other day who said they left well over $1 million on the table last year because they didn’t have the drivers.”
To keep their fleets moving, Pantuso said, many motorcoach companies have offered drivers pay increases of 20% or more in the past two years.
“The pay issue is starting to resolve itself, and that’s helping,” he said. “And as we go through a recession, maybe, there could be people who stepped out of the job market who might want to start coming back.”
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PHOTOS COURTESY ABA
CONFERENCE
ABA scenes, left to right: A reception on the Marketplace floor; ABA president Peter Pantuso; delegates posing with historic characters
SCENE
Sister Cities Festival is Laredo’s international shopping extravaganza
BY VICKIE MITCHELL
Each July, craftspeople, food vendors and other merchants from Mexico, Central America and South America travel across the border to sell their wares during Laredo’s International Sister Cities Festival.
This summer’s event, July 14–16, is the 19th edition of what is described as an indoor mercado — Spanish for market — where the aroma of Mexican food and the sounds of live music waft around 200 booths set up on the main floor of the Sames Auto Arena.
A south-of-the-border shopping experience
For group tours, the festival is an easy and inexpensive south-of-the-border shopping experience, a chance to talk to talented artisans as they work, eat Mexican specialties and see entertainment by talents from Laredo and its Sister Cities.
Admission is free, a commitment the city made long ago to ensure large crowds for the artisans. “It’s been a goodwill gesture to our Sister Cities,” says Selina Villarreal, marketing manager for Visit Laredo. “If visitors spend money, we want them to spend it with the festival’s exhibitors.”
Laredo has more than 30 Sister Cities, so the festival encompasses many cultural traditions. With so much to see and buy — from wool serapes and metal work to colorful cowboy boots and silver jewelry — Villarreal suggests tours plan for an overnight stay.
“I think you are going to want to set aside two days for the visit,” she says. “On Friday, when the festival opens it is a little slower, so groups could walk at their own pace and talk to the artisans then enjoy some empanadas, tacos and coffees — load up on calories then walk them off while going booth to booth.”
Taking time to visit with artisans will give visitors more appreciation for the items they buy, says Villarreal. “Women’s clothing is always popular and those beautiful embroidered tops or dress are handmade. You won’t find them anywhere else and they will last.”
More to Explore
Hotels are located across from the arena, making it easy to extend the trip and take in Laredo’s more than dozen import shops as well as its popular mall and outlet center.
Of course, shopping isn’t the festival’s only attraction. Visitors often gather early to get a spot near the stage for the various performers from Mexico and Latin America as well as popular local entertainers.
And then there is the food. Villarreal attends the festival every year and she fondly remembers filling up on freshly made quesadillas. “The quesadillas were $1. Every time I walked by, I’d say, ‘Can I have one?’ ”
She also remembers eyeing Mexican candies and flavorful salsas one year, deciding to wait and buy them on Sunday, the festival’s final day.
But when she returned that day, the booth operator had some bad news for her. They had sold out.
“That is the risk,” she says. “If they sell out, you have to wait a whole year for the next festival.”
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FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT: SELINA VILLARREAL SVILLARREA@CI.LAREDO.TX.US 956-795-2200 (O) 956-794-1717 (D) 956-744-1900 (M) VISITLAREDO.COM visitlaredo.com 956-795-2200
Destination
DISHES
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Regional culinary specialties, clockwise from top: Crawfish in Lafayette; a Louisville hot brown; Nashville hot chicken
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FOOD & SPIRITS ISSUE
GO AHEAD AND ORDER THESE LOCAL FAVORITES
BY KATI HYER
Every signature dish has a story, especially the ones that help define a place, from city signatures eats like Louisville’s hot brown and Nashville’s hot chicken to regional delights like crawfish and cheese curds. Read on to discover their origins and the destinations to find them.
Nashville Hot Chicken NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE
Nashville hot chicken is taking Southern food culture by fiery storm.
With spice levels ranging from mild to “Shut the Cluck Up,” Music City’s namesake extra hot fried chicken will have groups begging for sweet tea and crying for more.
Served up with pickles and white bread, hot chicken seems to be the Kardashian of food: inexplicably famous and growing more so by the day. Lore suggests the dish was developed, of all things, out of vengeance. A crossed lover laced a meal with a lethal amount of spice, but instead of repentance, Nashville hot chicken was hatched.
“We have several amazing spots for Nashville hot chicken,” said LouAnna Henton, director of tourism sales for the Nashville Convention and Visitors Corporation. “Assembly Food Hall houses Prince’s Hot Chicken, the original hot chicken restaurant. Puckett’s Grocery has meat and three plates. Then there’s the Loveless Café, an authentic Nashville restaurant on the Natchez Trace.”
No questions asked, Hattie B’s Hot Chicken is the most popular of Nashville’s hot chicken establishments (the restaurants attract gluttons for punishment in droves), but no location is suitable for large groups. Order ahead and picnic at a pavilion in Nashville’s famed Centennial Park instead. “We have utilized this method in the past and it works well,” Henton said. VISITMUSICCITY.COM
The Hot Brown LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY
How do you know it’s the 1920s in Louisville, Kentucky? Hotel ballrooms are packed with flappers and everyone wants to try the city’s hot new culinary creation: the hot brown.
“Party-goers danced the night away and wandered into the kitchen looking for a meal,” said Jordan Skora, marketing communications manager at Louisville Tourism. “The Brown Hotel’s chef was put on the spot. He had leftover bread, turkey, tomatoes and bacon that he popped in the broiler and topped with mornay sauce… and the hot brown was born.”
As the dish’s popularity grew, other restaurants in Derby City began offering their own takes on the baked, open-faced sandwich. Local menus have been known to sport hot brown pizza and hot brown tacos, Skora said.
To enjoy the hot sandwich within walking distance of distilleries and other entertainment, groups can head to the Bristol in downtown. If groups find themselves in Paristown, The Café offers its take on the hot brown as well. Authenticity can’t be beat by experiencing the original at the Brown Hotel, the second oldest hotel in Louisville. Visiting this fall? The Brown Hotel celebrates its centenary this year, and the city hosts Hot Brown Week in late October.
GOTOLOUISVILLE.COM
Smith Island Cake
MARYLAND
A remote, nearly unreachable fishing village on Maryland’s Eastern Shore is the birthplace of Smith Island cake, a cake of staggering height and history.
“It’s the Maryland state dessert,” said Smith Island Baking Company founder Brian Murphy. “Smith Island cakes are amazing layer cakes made from scratch with ingredients I can pronounce: butter, flour, eggs, sugar, vanilla.”
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LOUISVILLE TOURISM COURTESY LAFAYETTE TRAVEL
The towering eight- to 15-layer cakes, cemented together with fudge frosting, have been a symbol of faith, community and togetherness ever since they were introduced in the 1800s.
“Smith Island watermen would go out for months at a time on the autumn oyster harvest,” Murphy said. “Their families would send them with provisions, quilts and Smith Island cakes, to remind them of the love of the community that they’d left behind.” According to Susan Seifried, vice president of public relations at Visit Annapolis, the thin layers of cake and fudge frosting were thought to moisten the cake and help it to last longer at sea.
While the cakes originated on Smith Island, for a time they were made only by request and came close to being lost to history. The Smith Island Baking Company in nearby Crisfield revitalized and grew the cake’s fame and boasts a large open storefront, where groups visiting in the afternoon can sample fresh goodies. “There’s nothing like a cake just out of the oven,” Murphy said.
Smith Island too far to include in the itinerary?
Travelers to Annapolis can find Smith Island Cakes on the menu at a few locations, including the locally famous Boatyard Bar and Grill.
VISITMARYLAND.ORG
Smith Island Cake, the state dessert of Maryland
Crawfish
SOUTHERN LOUISIANA
Crayfish. Mudbugs. Ecrevisse. Whatever the terminology, one thing is certain: Crawfish are très, très bon and delight groups visiting southern Louisiana.
“Most of our traditions are based around community and family,” said Kaylie Leblanc, assistant vice president of communications at Lafayette Travel. “So crawfish boils are community and family coming together. We love to share our Southern hospitality with others as well.” Faith tradition plays a role in the popularity of crawfish-centric foods: A large portion of Louisianans observe the Catholic Lenten tradition of giving up red meat between Ash Wednesday and Easter — occurring around the same time as crawfish season.
The crawfish boil is the quintessential Cajun feast. The freshwater crustaceans are cooked with spicy seasonings and, on occasion, sausages, potatoes, mushrooms, corn or other vegetables. Traditionally, locals enjoy them community-style on long buffet tables.
While in Lafayette, try Crawfish Haven, Louisiana Crawfish Times or Prejean’s. Neighboring Breaux Bridge is the crawfish capital of the world. Groups visiting during the
14 MARCH 2023
COURTESY SMITH ISLAND BAKING CO.
first full weekend in May can sample crawfish every way imaginable during the Breaux Bridge Crawfish Festival. For an immersive experience, groups can experience a crawfish excursion at Mrs. Rose’s Bed and Breakfast and Crawfish Haven in Kaplan.
LAFAYETTETRAVEL.COM
Cheese Curds
WISCONSIN
“Cheese curds are the staple of Wisconsin and the Milwaukee area,” said Ian Thompson, senior communications manager for Visit Milwaukee. “They are the salty snack of the Midwest!”
Cheese curds hold their title as chief snack thanks to the state’s role as the original dairyland. “With the creativity that we have with our dairy products, how do you snack? On cheese,” Thompson said.
Elegant or everyday versions, cheese curds of the fresh and squeaky variety can be enjoyed at Clock Shadow Creamery, the only urban cheese factory in Milwaukee.
“Our staff favorites are Pepperpot’s Cheese Curds, which have Jamaican Jerk seasoning in the batter,” Thompson said. “The secret to the best cheese curds is a recipe made of a light batter and
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A crawfish excursion at Crawfish Haven
@GoSoIN JEFFERSONVILLE · CLARKSVILLE · NEW ALBANY · CHARLESTOWN Southern Indiana IS BEST Shared with a Friend! Contact Todd Read for custom group itineraries at (812) 280-8082 or Todd@GoSoIN.com.
“SMITH ISLAND WATERMEN WOULD GO OUT FOR MONTHS AT A TIME ... THEIR FAMILIES WOULD SEND THEM WITH PROVISIONS, QUILTS AND SMITH ISLAND CAKES, TO REMIND THEM OF THE LOVE OF THE COMMUNITY.”
— BRIAN MURPHY, SMITH ISLAND BAKING COMPANY
cheddar. However, the fried ones do not squeak.”
Milwaukee Food and City Tours offer participants the chance to eat, drink and squeak their way through town. Groups can browse for cheese curds of all kinds at the Milwaukee Cheese Mart, a nearly 100-year-old institution.
VISITMILWAUKEE.ORG
Bison
CHEYENNE, WYOMING
Groups can venture off the eatin’ path in Cheyenne, Wyoming. “When you think of the Great American West, one of the images that comes to mind is the bison,” said Jim Walter, vice president of sales and marketing for Visit Cheyenne. “Their free-roaming status screams freedom in the wide-open plains.”
Travelers clamor to see the animals — and soon after, get a taste. Groups can do both at the Terry Bison Ranch.
“The 340,000-acre ranch just outside of Cheyenne has 3,000 head of bison,” Walter said. “You can take a train ride into the herd, feed them, then head to the Senator’s Steakhouse restaurant at the ranch for lunch or dinner. They do everything: short ribs, burgers, steaks, and you can even buy frozen bison to take home.”
Additional options abound; downtown standouts include the Rib and Chop House Restaurant and Little America.
“With Bison and Cheyenne, it’s really two iconic pieces of the West coming together with the animal and the legends and the history surrounding Cheyenne,” Walter said. “It’s the perfect combination.”
CHEYENNE.ORG
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Cheese curds and other Wisconsin specialties
Visiting a Cheyenne bison ranch
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BY ALLEN MEYER, COURTESY VISIT CHEYENNE
Milwaukee cheese curds
May 26th-September 15,2023 w w w t h e c o d y c a t t l e c o m p a n y c o m ( 3 0 7 ) 2 7 2 - 5 7 7 0 1 9 1 0 D E M A R I S D R C O D Y , W Y 8 2 4 1 4
The best dinner & Show in Cody, wy
Hungry for adventure? Alamogordo whets appetites
BY VICKIE MITCHELL
One minute, you’re tubing on white sand; a short drive later, you’re slipping down a snowy slope, all thanks to the geographical magic of southeastern New Mexico.
In the Tularosa Basin, in and around Alamogordo, visitors can explore White Sands National Park, a space museum, pistachio farms and petroglyphs. Thirty minutes away, in the Sacramento Mountains, there’s Cloudcroft complete with shopping, ski slopes, skating, a national forest and a decidedly Old West vibe.
And all along the way, local food and drink establishments fuel and fun. Bakeries, breweries, wineries and diners are all packed with personality and personable locals.
Pistachios and Wine
For example, on the patio at Heart of the Desert Pistachios and Wine near Alamogordo, sunsets are toasted with sips of wine, pistachios and other snacks. Midweek, a food truck and musicians roll in for WineDown Wednesdays.
At D. H. Lescombes Winery and Bistro, a glass of wine tastes even better with a shared Signature Nosh - a spread of meats, cheeses,
artichokes, olives, fruit, and sweet and spicy Mesilla Valley pecans. At 575 Brewery, a roomy patio and guest food trucks make this an inviting local gathering place. Speaking of brews and food trucks, each year the area celebrates these niches at the Cottonwood Brew Fest (April) and the Battle of the Food Trucks (November). The food truck showdown grows larger every year with almost 20 trucks participating in the latest one. The menus include can’t miss favorites like Off the Wall Curbside Creation’s five-cheese mac and cheese with buffalo chicken and Lolita’s tacos de carne asada.
Cool Adventures
In contrast to Alamogordo and its high desert clime, Cloudcroft is a cool respite in the summer and a snowy playground in the winter. On a December day, it can be near 70 in Alamogordo and snowing in Cloudcroft.
With a population of 777 or so, the small town is surprisingly stuffed with eating options. Within a few steps along and near Burro Avenue, visitors find not one, but three bakeries. All are unique and beloved for their cakes, pies, croissants, cookies and cupcakes. Those treats taste even sweeter with a cup from Black Bear Coffee, located in Cloudcroft’s old post office - a natural gathering spot. In another vintage building along Burro Avenue’s covered boardwalk, dollar bills left by patrons plaster the walls and hang from the ceilings of the Western Bar and Café. This rustic Cloudcroft tradition is known for filling omelets, steaks and everything in between. Cloudcroft Brewing’s creative pizzas pair well with it’s equally creative brews like Rail Spike Red Ale. Beyond downtown, the line pours out the door at Mad Jack’s Mountaintop Barbecue while a generous lineup of vegetarian entrees balance the steaks, chops and barbecue at Big Daddy’s Diner.
For a sweet, nostalgic end to several days of exploring, seek the shiny chrome and pink neon of Caliche’s, a frozen custard stand in Alamogordo. Dig into the crowd favorite Fudge Brownie Bliss — vanilla frozen custard, brownie bits and hot fudge — and savor all the cool adventures you’ve experienced in the valleys and mountains of southeast New Mexico.
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FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT: EVELYN HUFF 575-439-4268 EHUFF@CI.ALAMOGORDO.NM.US CI.ALAMOGORDO.NM.US AlamogordoNMTrue.com 575-439-4100
LOUISIANA
By Jill Gleeson
Lovely, lyrical Louisiana is like nowhere else in the world.
From Cajun to Creole, each culture (and its justifiably beloved cuisine) thrives in the Pelican State, which also offers tour groups the countless charms of the country’s most unique city, New Orleans. It’s a place where history comes alive in a slew of varied attractions, but it’s also somewhere always looking to the future, with new and freshly upgraded offerings sure to delight visitors. With so much to love about Louisiana, the only issue group leaders might encounter is getting groups to leave come tour’s end.
BY PAUL KIEU/HUNTER ROMERO, COURTESY LAFAYETTE TRAVEL
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STATE SPOTLIGHT
Groups can enjoy zydeco dance parties at Vermilionville.
POPULAR DEMAND
THE NATIONAL WORLD WAR II MUSEUM
Designated by Congress as “America’s National World War II Museum,” this massive, three-building institution brings to life through extraordinary, interactive exhibits the American story in the global conflict that raged from 1939 to 1945. New as of November is “Expressions of America,” an immersive outdoor sound and light spectacular that transports viewers through history via nextlevel special effects, music and nine-story-tall projections. The National World War II Museum offers groups reduced pricing and is conveniently situated in downtown New Orleans. Travel planners may also arrange for box lunches, guided tours and more.
HOUMAS HOUSE
Houmas House, which is located in Darrow, just about 30 minutes southeast of Baton Rouge and an hour from New Orleans, gives visitors a look at an exquisite sugarcane plantation. Painstakingly restored to the antebellum era, though it traces its beginnings back to 1774, Houmas House boasts a mansion filled with a jaw-dropping array of antiques and historical artwork, as well as sprawling, carefully tended grounds. Special group packages include escorted tours of the Classical Revival-style home, combined with self-guided walks through the gardens and a buffet lunch at the on-site cafe.
VERMILIONVILLE
One of Louisiana’s most unique attractions, Lafayette’s Vermilionville is a 23-acre folklife village that depicts, through costumed historical interpreters and artisans, the day-to-day doings of the area’s Creole, Cajun and Native American peoples up until the late 1800s. The site includes seven original homes dating between 1790 to 1880, as well as a wide array of artifacts such as tools, furnishings and housewares from that period. Vermilionville not only gives groups guided tours but can also provide an array of delightful add-ons that range from cooking demonstrations to dance lessons and lunch.
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A historic structure at Vermilionville in Lafayette
A Vermilionville interpreter
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National World War II Museum
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An elegant dining room at Houmas House
POPULAR DEMAND SHREVEPORT AQUARIUM
Group travelers can meet more than 300 aquatic species and 1,000 individual saltwater and freshwater animals at the Shreveport Aquarium. Themed exhibits feature beautifully hued coral reefs, sultry tropical lagoons and even re-created shipwrecks. Groups are also sure to love watching the shark feedings, which include a talk from one of the aquarium’s experts, snapping turtle feedings in the spring and summer, and interactive tidepool and ray experiences that allow guests to touch stingrays, sea stars and anemones, and more.
UP AND COMING
VUE ORLEANS
When Vue Orleans debuted in February 2022, it seemed destined to become one of Louisiana’s hottest new attractions, and it has clearly fulfilled that promise. At the foot of Canal Street, Vue takes groups through original films and state-of-the-art interactive exhibits that explore NOLA’s distinctive culture through the lens of history, food, music and more. After a high-tech elevator ride that provides its own fascinating view of New Orleans, visitors arrive on the 33rd floor, where a 360-degree indoor observation deck awaits. Head up another flight and experience the 360-degree rooftop platform, with stunning sights such as the Mississippi River and the French Quarter.
POVERTY POINT
VIRTUAL REALITY TOURS
One of the most important archaeological sites in the country got a big upgrade in December, when a new virtual reality app launched that allows group visitors to experience it as it was 3,400 years ago. Featuring nine experiences, the mobile app explores Poverty Point, a series of massive earthen mounds and ridges erected by Native Americans in what would eventually become Pioneer, Louisiana. While the reason for the earthworks has been lost to time, groups can now stand, for example, on the largest mound and see how it looked when it was built, bringing the past into the present as never before.
GOODMAN IMAX DOME THEATER
Also in December, following a million-dollar makeover, Shreveport’s upgraded Sci-Port Discovery Center IMAX Dome reopened as the Goodman IMAX Dome Theater. The theater, which is located in a 92,000-square-foot, science-oriented complex that features interactive exhibits and a planetarium, now boasts a 4K laser-based projection system. Other enhancements include new sound and light
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Poverty Point
Shreveport Aquarium
SHREVEPORT CVB
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Sci-Port Discovery Center
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equipment, all of which combine to present films with better clarity, color and contrast than groups have ever seen before. Thanks to the improvements, the Goodman IMAX is now able to show feature films as well as educational documentaries.
THE LOUISIANA PURCHASE GARDENS AND ZOO
The Louisiana Purchase Gardens and Zoo in Monroe offers more than 400 animals and 100 species, with enclosures grouped along two miles of pathways that connect them with gardens and grounds. Groups will enjoy the recently added budgie and tortoise exhibits, which allow opportunities to feed the critters. Even more upgrades are on the way, including a new sloth exhibit. Still to be built are an alligator feeding habitat with a viewing platform, smaller alligator habitats, a beaver habitat, an otter habitat and a turtle pond, all part of the estimated $1.2 million phase 1 of the zoo’s master plan.
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ZOO
COURTESY VUE ORLEANS COURTESY LA PURCHASE GARDEN AND
Vue Orleans
An exhibit at Poverty Point
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Louisiana Purchase Garden and Zoo
OVERNIGHT SENSATIONS
HORSESHOE LAKE CHARLES
The 60,000-square-foot, 253-room Horseshoe Lake Charles, a Caesar’s property that opened in December, gives groups a thrilling new place to stay and play in Lake Charles. There’s gaming galore, with almost 1,000 slot machines and table games, a World Series of Poker Poker Room and a Caesar’s Sports Book location. Multiple dining options are on the menu, too, from American cuisine to Italian and Pan Asian. Coming later this year: Gordon Ramsay Steak, the first Louisiana-based restaurant from the famed, multi-Michelin-starred chef.
With our wide array of beautiful meeting spaces, flexible itinerary customization, and lagniappe such as multilingual tour leads, group travel is made easy in Louisiana’s River Parishes. Let Willma Harvey, CTP, CTIS customize the perfect trip for your group. willma @ lariverparishes.com | 985-359-2783
Horseshoe Lake Charles
COURTESY VISIT LAKE CHARLES
HILTON BATON ROUGE CAPITOL CENTER
Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the Hilton Baton Rouge Capitol Center dates back to 1927, when it was known as the Heidelberg Hotel. Entwined in the fortunes of infamous Louisiana governor Huey P. Long — it was once used as the State Capitol during a power struggle between Long and Lieutenant Governor Paul Cyr — the property was reopened as a Hilton in 2006 following a $70 million renovation. Ensconced on the banks of the Mississippi River, just two blocks from the Old State Capitol, the Art Deco beauty offers 291 guest rooms and an old secret tunnel used by Long to visit his mistress.
St. Tammany Parish is located less than an hour from New Orleans, Baton Rouge, and the Mississippi Gulf Coast. Southern charm and big-city amenities await you on Louisiana’s Northshore, where everyone is family. Bring your appetite for life and discover where New Orleans has come to play and get away for more than a century.
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Reconnect with friends on LOUISIANA NORTHSHORE
Hilton Baton Rouge Capitol Center COURTESY VISIT BATON ROUGE
#LANorthshore • 800-634-9443 • LouisianaNorthshore.com
OVERNIGHT SENSATIONS
THE SOUTHERN HOTEL
A gorgeous boutique property, The Southern Hotel, sits pretty in the historic heart of little Covington, just across Lake Pontchatrain from the Big Easy. Built in the Mission-style of architecture in 1907, it reopened to guests in 2014 following a two-year, $8 million renovation. The property, which includes public spaces filled with regional art, on-site dining, a plunge pool and a spa, features 40 guest rooms and two suites. Groups of up to 40 are welcome to buy it out, pending availability.
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The Southern Hotel in Covington
BY CONSTANCE HIGELY, COURTESY THE SOUTHERN HOTEL
MEMORABLE MEALS
LASYONE’S MEAT PIE KITCHEN
A Natchitoches institution since it opened in 1967, Lasyone’s is most famous for its hearty, fried pastries filled with either beef and pork or crawfish. But the restaurant also features loads of other Cajun and Creole favorites for groups to sample, such as shrimp and grits, gumbo, crawfish etouffee, red beans and rice, and po’boys. Frequented by famed folks from Charles Kuralt to Daryl Hannah, who filmed the classic movie “Steel Magnolias” in the town, Lasyone’s can seat large groups in the second-floor banquet room.
BY DEB THOMPSON
Meat pies at Lasyone’s in Nathcitoches
PHOTOS COURTESY NATCHITOCHES CVB
FOOD & SPIRITS ISSUE
MEMORABLE MEALS
PALMETTOS ON THE BAYOU
Palmettos on the Bayou, a sophisticated Acadian-style restaurant that has specialized in serving groups for more than two decades, serves up classic Creole cuisine from its digs on the Bayou Bonfouca in Slidell. Shrimp, duck and Gulf oysters are all mainstays on the menu, but just as delightful is the lovely waterfront location, surrounded by cypress and moss-draped oak trees. Groups, which are sure to love the weekend brunches featuring live music, should be sure to check out renowned Louisiana artist George Dunbar’s artwork, on display at the restaurant.
PAT’S OF HENDERSON
Specializing in steaks, seafood and Cajun fare, family-owned Pat’s of Henderson has been one of Lake Charles’ most acclaimed eateries for more than four decades, snagging numerous local and state restaurant awards over the years. The lengthy menu pays homage to the proprietors’ Cajun heritage and includes everything from fried alligator to boudin, plus crab, catfish and crawfish dishes, and the “local favorites” fried shrimp and stuffed red snapper. Pat’s is also open weekdays for lunch.
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LOUISIANATRAVEL.COM
Shrimp and grits Palmettos
A cocktail at Pat’s of Henderson
COURTESY VISIT LAKE CHARLES
PHOTOS BY RANDY SCHMIDT, COURTESY LA NORTHSHORE
Palmettos on the Bayou
VisitLakeCharles.org LIVE it up WANT A BETTER GROUP EXPERIENCE? Raise your expectations.
28 MARCH 2023
Situated on a reclaimed historic distillery property, Frankfort’s Castle and Key is one of many up-and-coming distilleries in Kentucky’s bourbon country.
DESTINATION AGING AND ENGAGING
BOURBON TOURISM FUELS KENTUCKY’S ASCENT
BY RACHEL CRICK
Kentucky’s bourbon country offers a taste of some of the boldest flavors in the Bluegrass.
From Whiskey Row in Louisville to the Distillery District in Lexington, distilleries pepper the rolling hills of central Kentucky, drawing thousands of visitors annually for tastings and tours. The small towns that surround these distilleries are nearly synonymous with the rich spirits they produce, but they also offer travelers historic downtowns, iconic attractions and breathtaking Kentucky scenery.
In addition to stopping at distilleries to enjoy behind-the-scenes tours and samples of some of the state’s most distinctive bourbons, groups should maximize their time in these small towns in bourbon country.
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FOOD & SPIRITS ISSUE
BARDSTOWN
Home to famous distilleries such as Willett, Bardstown Bourbon Company, Heaven Hill and Lux Row, Bardstown claims the right to Bourbon Capital of the World. Founded in 1780, this small town just 40 miles outside of Louisville is a well of history, with over 300 of its buildings on the National Register of Historic Places. Among the best known historic sites in Bardstown is My Old Kentucky Home State Park, home to Stephen Foster, who wrote the signature Kentucky ballad played before every Kentucky Derby. Groups can tour this historic home, complete with period furnishings and art, and wander its lush grounds. During warmer months, they can catch a production of “The Stephen Foster Story,” an outdoor musical production.
“We’re small town America with some big city amenities,” said Samantha Brady, executive director of the Bardstown Nelson County Tourist and Convention Commission. “Each distillery is different from the next, but on top of that we have rich history steeped in culture. A lot of that is bourbon culture, but a lot of that is just Southern hospitality culture.”
In addition to its vintage architecture, history buffs will enjoy Bardstown’s selection of museums, such as the Kentucky Railway Museum, the General Hal Moore Military Museum, the African American Heritage Museum and the Oscar Getz Museum of Whiskey History. At the Bardstown Civil War Museum, groups can purchase tickets to see Old Bardstown Colonial Village and Park, a re-creation of a 1790s village featuring historic cabins and an accurate representation of life on the frontier. Groups can also opt for self-guided historic downtown walking tours.
To enjoy fine dining with a side of scenery, groups can reserve seats on My Old Kentucky Dinner Train, where they’ll enjoy multicourse meals on a train ride through Bardstown and the surrounding countryside. Another town dining staple is Old Talbott Tavern, the oldest bourbon bar in the world and one of the oldest buildings in Bardstown. Groups can choose from a selection of hearty menu items, such as a traditional Hot Brown, ribeye and bourbon-inspired dishes. In addition to its many distilleries, Bardstown also has several wineries. Groups can tour the vineyards, taste some of the distinct varietals and dine at Forest Edge Winery, Springhill Winery, Chuckleberry Farm and Winery, and McIntyre’s Winery and Berries.
VISITBARDSTOWN.COM
LEBANON
Due south of Bardstown is Lebanon, a town known for both bourbon and beer. Home to several distilleries, nature attractions, and a charming selection of local restaurants and shops, Lebanon makes an excellent stop on any group itinerary.
Nena Olivier, director of Visit Lebanon Kentucky, said what sets Lebanon apart is “the hospitality, and then the variety of not just bourbon attractions but outdoor activities, arts and other attractions you can visit.”
Maker’s Mark is among the most famous brands of bourbon, making its distillery an obvious destination for tours. Groups can take a guided tour of the distillery’s campus to learn about the brand’s history or opt for the more in-depth Behind the Bourbon Tour, which gives them a detailed walk-through of the bourbon’s production process. Both tours are rounded out with a tasting. Also in Lebanon is the Limestone Branch Distillery, which Steve and Paul Beam, descendants of the Jim Beam empire, opened in 2011; a tour through this facility explores the family’s heritage in the Kentucky bourbon industry. These distilleries aren’t Lebanon’s only claim to bourbon fame; the city is also home to Independent Stave Company’s Kentucky Cooperage, which makes the oak barrels that age bourbon at many distilleries in the state. Groups can tour the cooperage to see how each barrel is handcrafted and learn about the significance of oak barrels to the bourbon industry.
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A mint julep experience at My Old Kentucky Home State Park
COURTESY VISIT BARDSTOWN
In addition to these bourbon hotspots, Lebanon offers plenty of outdoor activities for active groups, from hiking and biking its trails to canoeing in the Fagan Branch Reservoir. History buffs will enjoy the city’s self-guided Historic Homes and Landmarks Tour, which explores Lebanon’s rich Civil War history. They can visit the Lebanon National Cemetery, the historic cemetery where soldiers who perished in the Battle of Perryville were interred. Lebanon is also the site of the Loretto Motherhouse, where the Sisters of Loretto reside. Groups can visit its heritage center to check out artifacts and exhibits detailing the history of the organization and of Kentucky, dating back to pioneer days. Finally, groups can catch a theater production or participate in an art workshop at Kentucky Classic Arts.
Groups can grab a slice of pizza or some classic bar food at Pub 68. Or they can try the Rosewood Bar and Grill, where they’ll find a selection of choice steaks, seafood and sandwiches. At Cedarwood, groups can expect a homecooked meal and a bit of Southern hospitality with country classics like bourbon chicken and country fried steak.
VISITLEBANONKY.COM
COURTESY KY TOURISM
COURTESY VISIT BARDSTOWN
A performance of “The Stephen Foster Story”
Mash tanks at Maker’s Mark in Lebanon
LAWRENCEBURG
Prior to the prohibition, Lawrenceburg had a wealth of bourbon distilleries and was something of a hub for the spirit’s production. Its prominence in the bourbon industry stemmed from the vast network of waterways that once wound through Anderson County, before the Kentucky River was dammed. Today, it’s home to two well-known distilleries, Wild Turkey and Four Roses. Wild Turkey provides excellent views of the Kentucky River and pre-Prohibition memorabilia, while Four Roses was built in the Spanish Mission-style, making it some of the most unique architecture among Kentucky’s distilleries. A couple more distilleries are in the works, one of which will be built on the foundations of the pre-Prohibition Old Hoffman Distillery.
“We are the heart of bourbon country,” said Robbie Morgan, director of tourism at the Lawrenceburg/Anderson County Tourism Commission. “We have the stories of people who were very passionate about bourbon that really tweaked these recipes and came up with processes and techniques for making it.”
Guaranteed Good Times!
Bourbon enthusiasts will also be thrilled to find the Lawrenceburg Bourbon Company, a bar and retail shop whose proprietors plan to add a micro-distillery in the next few years. The charming shop sells rare bourbons and wines, and groups can arrange private tastings with boxed lunches. The city is home to Lover’s Leap Winery, a picturesque vineyard that offers tours detailing the history of wine in Kentucky, and Rising Sons Winery, which also grows the rare pawpaw plant.
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The historic grounds of the Maker’s Mark distillery
— ROBBIE MORGAN, LAWRENCEBURG/ANDERSON COUNTY TOURISM COMMISSION
“WE HAVE THE STORIES OF PEOPLE WHO WERE VERY PASSIONATE ABOUT BOURBON THAT REALLY TWEAKED THESE RECIPES.”
Experience “Always Original” Winchester with your group or next gathering — home to the world’s only Beer Cheese Trail. Join us downtown to enjoy great shopping, good food, eclectic arts and historic venues that make memories for a lifetime. Plan your trip at visitwinchesterky.com GROUP
ABETTOR BREWING • HARKNESS EDWARDS VINEYARDS FORT BOONESBOROUGH STATE PARK • MT. FOLLY FARM
FRIENDLY TRIPS:
Lawrenceburg has several local eateries that can accommodate groups with the proper notice. At Bluegrass Sabor, guests can enjoy a Southern-American menu with classics like a hot brown or pecan-crusted chicken. At Bourbon Station, groups will find burgers, steak and a bistro menu, as well as a variety of wine, spirits and cocktails. At Heavens to Betsy! Bakery and Café, groups can try some famously massive sandwiches, including their highly praised Reuben.
Depending on the season, groups may catch one of Lawrenceburg’s many festivals and events, such as Food Truck Fridays, held in the summer, or the annual Anderson County Burgoo Festival, the last week of September.
VISITLAWRENCEBURGKY.COM
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COURTESY KY TOURISM
Filling barrels at Wild Turkey distillery in Lawrenceburg
FRANKFORT
The state capital of Kentucky is not one of its busiest cities. Still, this quaint seat of Franklin County offers attractions in abundance, as well as several key bourbon sites. The Frankfort Tourist Commission offers step-on guides for motorcoach groups as they roll through the scenic city.
“There’s plenty to do in a day or several days,” said Robin Antenucci, executive director of the Frankfort Tourist Commission. “It’s a good central location, and it’s more affordable than Lexington.”
Frankfort boasts one of the most iconic bourbon producers in the state, Buffalo Trace. This distillery produces some of the best known and the most coveted bourbons in the world, such as the Van Winkle collection, Blanton’s Single Barrel, Weller, E.H. Taylor Jr., Buffalo Trace and Eagle Rare. Groups can arrange to tour its massive campus to learn about the brand’s history and its contributions to the industry. Castle and Key, a relatively new distillery with plenty of rustic charm, is nestled along Frankfort’s picturesque backroads and was built on the grounds of a nonoperational pre-Prohibition distillery. To learn more
about the city’s history, groups can take the Bourbon and History Walking Tour, led by a guide dressed as E.H. Taylor, one of bourbon’s founding fathers.
Frankfort’s attractions are not limited to bourbon. Groups can tour the Capitol building, a historic, domed building sculpted from marble and decorated with murals, sculptures of famous Kentuckians and a floral clock on its grounds. They can also check out the Kentucky Military History Museum, Daniel Boone’s grave in the Frankfort Cemetery and Liberty Hall Historic Site, which includes two historic houses built by Kentucky’s first U.S. senator.
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PHOTOS COURTESY FRANKFORT TC
Downtown Frankfort
“THERE’S PLENTY TO DO IN A DAY OR SEVERAL DAYS. IT’S A GOOD CENTRAL LOCATION AND IT’S MORE AFFORDABLE THAN LEXINGTON.”
Frankfort
#KentuckyDistilled @VisitFrankfortKY 300 Sa nt C a r St , Suite 102 Frankfort KY 40601 v sitfrankfort com 502) 875-8687
— ROBIN ANTENUCCI, THE FRANKFORT TOURIST COMMISSION
is
Frankfort also has a vibrant arts scene that’s easily accessible to visitors, from murals scattered throughout downtown to the city’s galleries to Josephine Sculpture Park, Kentucky’s only outdoor sculpture park.
At Rebecca Ruth’s Candy Factory, travelers can tour the facility and sample some of Frankfort’s sweetest local treats. For a unique dining experience, groups can arrange to enjoy a catered meal in the ambience of historic downtown buildings, such as the Elizabeth, a venue formerly known as the Good Shepherd Catholic Church.
VISITFRANKFORT.COM
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PHOTOS COURTESY FRANKFORT TC
Josephine Sculpture Park in Frankfort
19 hotels + over 80 Restaurants Right Off INTERSTATE 75 INTERSTATE 64 +
Buffalo Trace Distillery
VERSAILLES
A charming, historic downtown surrounded by miles of rolling hills, horse farms, vineyards and dry-stacked limestone fences, Versailles is steeped in the rich traditions of Kentucky life. It’s the seat of Woodford County, founded in 1792 and named to honor the Revolutionary War General Marquis de Lafayette. Today, it is home to several prominent attractions in the Bluegrass and is highly committed to creating customized, welcoming experiences for group travelers.
“Our rich agriculture land lends itself well to what have become its signature industries: bourbon, wine and bloodlines,” said Emily Downey, executive director of Reserve Woodford.
“Bloodlines” refers to the billion-dollar horse racing industry in Kentucky. The horse farms surrounding Versailles have raised many notable Thoroughbreds, including Kentucky Derby and even Triple Crown winners. Versailles’ most notable distillery is Woodford Reserve, formerly known as Labrot and Graham, one of the oldest distilling sites still operating in the state. This national historic landmark rests on the banks of a branch of Glenn’s Creek, which feeds other nearby distilleries and provides iron-free water central to the bourbon-making process. Groups can tour Woodford Reserve to learn about its unique distilling process and taste some of its most popular bourbons.
CORBIN LOVES COMPANY
Surrounded by the beauty of the Appalachian Mountains, Corbin is located in the outdoor adventure mecca of Kentucky, and is the perfect destination for your next group tour. Conveniently located o of I-75 at exit 25 by the shores of the beautiful and pristine Laurel Lake, Corbin is home to the Cumberland Falls, Daniel Boone National Forest, the Original KFC, Sanders Park, and the 7,000 seat Corbin Arena which hosts a variety of entertainment and di erent shows. Corbin is home to a host of locally owned restaurants who can accommodate large groups and satisfy any pallet. Whether you enjoy history, outdoor adventure or shopping and culinary treats, Corbin, KY can o er a variety of itineraries for your group! We cannot wait to see you … Corbin Loves Company!
606-528-8860
In addition to some of the most famous bourbon in Kentucky, Versailles boasts some iconic state attractions, like the Kentucky Castle. This medieval European-style castle was constructed as a passion project of its original owner in 1969. Though the original owner abandoned the project, the castle was eventually purchased, completed and opened as a hotel, restaurant and working farm. Groups can tour the castle grounds to glimpse its distinct architecture, eat at its farm-to-table restaurant or enjoy a bourbon pairing dinner. At Woodford Theater, groups can watch a production at one of the best community theaters in the state.
Downey said what makes Versailles stand out is its small-town charm,
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street festival in Versailles corbinkytourism.com
adding that it’s purposefully kept itself “strategically charming and quaint.” This strategy allows Versailles to customize each group’s visit. Reserve Woodford frequently rolls out the red carpet and throws block parties in downtown’s historic district for visitors to enjoy local restaurants, live music and shopping.
Groups can get to know the town better with the Woodford Unreserved Tour, which consists of a walk around the historic downtown with a cocktail in hand. For fresh air and a basket or bushel of fresh produce, groups can visit Eckert’s Orchard, where they can pick seasonal fruits and vegetables and purchase food products made at the orchard. Popular dining options include Ricardo’s Grill and Pub, Spark Community Café and Holly Hill Inn.
RESERVEWOODFORD.COM
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PHOTOS COURTESY RESERVE WOODFORD
Inside the Kentucky Castle
A bourbon tasting in Versailles
“OUR RICH AGRICULTURE LAND LENDS ITSELF WELL TO WHAT HAVE BECOME ITS SIGNATURE INDUSTRIES: BOURBON, WINE AND BLOODLINES.”
— EMILY DOWNEY, RESERVE WOODFORD
PUT MEANING ON THE MAP. www . meaningfultr avelpla tform.org/main/m ap Tr av el w ith Pur po se Ac ro ss N orth Am e ri ca . As travelers, we all want rich, authentic, and meaningful travel experiences. As travel professionals, we want to ensure we use travel as a force for good. Through the Meaningful Travel Map of North America, visitors can connect to locally owned social and environmental impact experiences and opportunities, unique and hands-on cultural experiences, products, and services
Pot column stills at Woodford Reserve Pictured: Take a cooking class with The League of Kitchens, to build cross-cultural connection and access to traditional cuisine.
TIMELESS TERRAIN
CENTURIES ECHO THROUGH GLACIER NATIONAL PARK
BY REBECCA TREON
Pay a visit to Glacier National Park and you’ll understand how it earned the nickname “the Crown of the Continent.”
Situated in northern Montana, Glacier National Park straddles the U.S.–Canada border, encompassing more than 1 million acres, sections of two mountain ranges, 130 lakes, and thousands of species of flora and fauna. With so much beautiful territory to explore, it’s no surprise Glacier is near the top of many travelers’ wish lists.
But the fun doesn’t end there. The nearby charming small towns of Kalispell, Whitefish and West Glacier give visitors a taste of Western hospitality. Not only do they offer authentic places to dine, shop, stay, and explore local culture, but they’re also home to ski slopes, golf courses, lakes and hiking trails.
Whether your group is faith-based, multi-generational travelers wanting to explore national parks, or friends in search of a Western adventure, Glacier and the surrounding towns offer groups a chance to experience not only the region’s natural beauty but also the culture of the West.
INSIDE THE PARK
Travelers have 1,583 square miles of alpine meadows, deep forests, waterfalls and two dozen glaciers to explore, with many ways to experience the terrain, from hiking its numerous trails to driving the Going-to-the-Sun-Road. Additional activities include fishing, kayaking, rafting, horseback riding and snowshoeing. The park is home to several historic lodges and nearby towns that offer the essence of Montana spirit.
Shortly after the area was designated a national park in 1910, the Great Northern Railway constructed several lodges and chalets that are still in use today, many on the
National Register of Historic Places. Lake McDonald Lodge has 82 total rooms and is 10 miles inside the park on Going-to-the-Sun Road. The shores of McDonald Lake (the park’s largest lake) feature a Swiss-style chalet, cabins and dormitory-style accommodations. There are several dining options at the lodge, including Russell’s Fireside Dining Room, Jammer Joe’s Grill and Pizzeria, and Lucke’s Lounge. Activities abound outdoors: There are Red Bus tours, boat cruises, horseback rides, evening ranger programs and numerous other outdoor activities year-round.
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COURTESY DISCOVER KALISPELL
Towering mountains, verdant valleys and pristine lakes inspire visitors to Glacier National Park.
To preserve its natural beauty, the park has relatively few roads, making it a great place to view wildlife like the mountain goat (the park’s mascot), moose, grizzly bears and lynx.
“One of the best ways to experience the area is the Glacier Institute, the official educational partner of the park,” said Tia Troy, public relations representative with Discover Kalispell. “They offer year-round programming from guided snowshoe hikes, full moon adventures [it’s a designated International Dark Sky Park], wildlife tracking and guided tours of the park.”
KALISPELL
Kalispell is roughly an hour from Glacier National Park and is the largest town in the region. The town of 25,000 people features shops, restaurants, cultural attractions and access to outdoor recreation.
Kalispell is close to both Whitefish Mountain Resort on Big Mountain and Blacktail Mountain Ski Area, is seven miles from Flathead Lake (the largest freshwater lake west of the Mississippi River) and is home to the Robert Muir Graves-designed Buffalo Hill Golf Club. And while Glacier National Park can get crowded and requires a timed entry reservation, nearby Lone Pine State Park doesn’t and offers many similar recreational activities such as hiking and snowshoeing. It offers a bird’s eye view of the entire valley from the wraparound deck of the visitor’s center, and Far West Boat Tours offers sightseeing charters of Flathead Lake.
Kalispell was incorporated as a city in the 1890s, and the home of one of its founders, the Conrad Mansion Museum, is one of the area’s top attractions. The majority of the artifacts inside are original, and groups can tour the property with guides in period dress. The Hockaday Museum of Art is in a former Carnegie library and has both permanent and rotating exhibits.
Historic downtown Kalispell is a walkable haven of locally owned shops and has a thriving culinary and beverage scene. There’s a shop that sells books, one that sells vinyl records, one that sells souvenirs made in Montana, and, naturally, a Western-wear store with thousands of pairs of cowboy boots. At Mercantile, travelers can sit down to a juicy steak or get some barbecue made in a former blacksmith shop at DeSoto Grill.
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COURTESY DISCOVER KALISPELL
COURTESY VISIT MONTANA
Kayaking on Flathead Lake
Wildlife on the road in Glacier National Park
Downtown Kalispell from above
COURTESY VISIT MONTANA
WHITEFISH
Twenty minutes’ drive north of Kalispell, Whitefish was once an important center for logging in Montana and has been a skiing destination (at Whitefish Mountain Resort) since the 1930s. For lovers of rail travel, Whitefish is a stop on the Amtrak Empire Builder, with connections to Spokane, Portland, Seattle and Chicago. Whitefish is great for groups of up to 300 people and has 25 lodging properties, including two convention hotels with 10,000 square feet of meeting space, Grouse Mountain Lodge and Lodge at Whitefish Lake.
Whitefish makes a great basecamp for groups just half an hour from the park. Groups can snowshoe, ride in a horse-drawn wagon, cross-country ski, even go dog sledding. There are 43 miles of paved walking and cycling trails throughout town and around Whitefish Lake. Smaller groups can take yoga classes, enjoy a spa day or take a hot-air balloon ride.
The quaint downtown area offers boutiques, galleries and dozens of restaurants ranging from a unique riff on a sandwich at The Wich Haus to comfort food at family-owned local staple Loula’s. Travelers can enjoy regional specialties like elk chili at Casey’s Bar and Grill or listen to live music at the Craggy Range Bar and Grill.
And on the way from Whitefish to West Glacier, many travelers plan a stop in Hungry Horse at The Huckleberry Patch for a slice of huckleberry pie or a jar of jam to bring home.
WEST GLACIER
The closest town to the south entrance of Glacier National Park, West Glacier offers plenty of amenities for groups that want to spend time in the park but not stay in it. This gateway town offers historic accommodations like the Belton Chalet, the first lodge built by the Great Northern Railroad, plus places to relax and recreate with a backdrop of breathtaking vistas.
If your group is visiting from May to October, a stop at the historic watering hole Freda’s is in order — it’s the perfect place to grab a burger and a beer after a long hike. Heaven’s Peak Montana Kitchen serves barbecue fusion with a side of panoramic views of the mountains.
At Glacier Distilling Company, groups can enjoy a spirits tasting or a tipple at the on-site speakeasy, Josephine’s.
“The park is obviously a big draw,” said Troy. “But the area’s culinary scene is booming. There are breweries, wineries, Montanafocused stores, cocktail bars — so much for visitors to explore.”
BY BRIAN SCHOTT, COURTESY
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VISITMT.COM
Welcome to West Glacier
A Whitefish ranch and ski area
COURTESY VISIT MONTANA
EXPLORE WHITEFISH
V E N TU R E
Be Our Guest:
Bold adventures mint indelible memories, but leave no trace like footfalls lost in the swirl of a trout stream. That is what is means to venture boldly in Kalispell.
Find Yourself in Kalispell — Adventure’s Natural Habitat
Fly fishing on the Flathead River, Middle Fork Your Group’s Story Starts Here. Contact Dawn Jackson at dawn@discoverkalispell.com and discover your adventure.
Plan, promote and lead better trips with our new podcast, Gather & Go! GROUP TRAVEL LEADER THE Smarter Tech for Better Trips with Ted Clements Taking Gen X on Tour with Andrae Marable All About Travel Advisors with Emma Weissmann and Jamie Biesiada Where Travel Meets Learning with Tonya Matthews GROUPTRAVELLEADER.COM/PODCAST 859.253.0455 KYLE ANDERSON kyle@grouptravelleader.com BRYCE WILSON bryce@grouptravelleader.com For sponsorship packages contact:
2023 TRAVEL GUIDE
GET CLOSE TO HISTORY Visit Little Rock and get close to American Civil Rights history. Walk the path of the Little Rock Nine at the Central High School National Historic Site and discover the Mosaic Templars Cultural Center, dedicated to telling the stories of the African American experience in Arkansas. Learn more at CivilRightsTrail.com and visit Arkansas.com to plan your trip today.
4 CONTENTS 8 36 Spreading the Word Civil Rights Museums THE U.S. CIVIL RIGHTS TRAIL IS REACHING NEW AUDIENCES WITH IMPACTFUL STORYTELLING. THESE LANDMARK INSTITUTIONS PRESERVE THE PAST AND INSPIRE FUTURE GENERATIONS. STUDENTS, TEACHERS AND ACTIVISTS FOUGHT TOGETHER FOR EQUALITY IN AMERICAN SCHOOLS. 16 44 26 52 Achievements in Education FOOT SOLDIERS AND ACTIVISTS RECOUNT THEIR OWN EXPERIENCES IN THE CIVIL RIGHTS ERA. Personal Stories Towns on the Trail Black-Owned Restaurants THESE SMALL DESTINATIONS PLAYED BIG PARTS IN THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT. THESE RESTAURANTS OFFER HERITAGE AND GREAT FOOD IN U.S. CIVIL RIGHTS TRAIL CITIES. 6 A Civil Rights Timeline FOLLOW IMPORTANT CIVIL RIGHTS EVENTS FROM 1951 TO 1968 PUBLISHED FOR 3500 PIEDMONT RD. NE, STE. 775 ATLANTA, GA 30305 404-231-1790 CIVILRIGHTSTRAIL.COM PUBLISHED BY NICHE TRAVEL PUBLISHERS 301 EAST HIGH STREET LEXINGTON, KY 40507 859-253-0455 GROUPTRAVELLEADER.COM TO ADVERTISE: BRYCE@GROUPTRAVELLEADER.COM ON THE COVER: “Worn But Not Out” depicts the endurance of civil rights activists. Painting by Edwin Lester, artistedwinlester.com.
What happened here changed the world.
When 10 sticks of dynamite planted by the Birmingham Ku Klux Klan exploded at 16th Street Baptist Church on Youth Sunday, four little Black girls were killed, a fifth maimed and two Black boys were slain nearby. The date of Sept. 15, 1963 registered the single greatest loss of life during the Civil Rights Movement.
Now revered as part of the Birmingham Civil Rights National Monument, a National Park Service unit, the stillactive church, including the museum in the basement, is open for tours. To learn more about dozens of sites on the U.S. Civil Rights Trail, search civilrightstrail.com
For information contact: Rosemary.Judkins@tourism.alabama.gov or call 334.242.4493
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Chris Granger
WALKOUT AT ROBERT RUSSA MOTON HIGH SCHOOL FARMVILLE, VIRGINIA
BROWN V. BOARD OF EDUCATION SUPREME COURT DECISION ILLEGALIZES SCHOOL SEGREGATION
EMMETT TILL MURDERED MONEY, MISSISSIPPI
ROSA PARKS ARRESTED MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA
BUSES DESEGREGATED MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA
MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. LEADS SOUTHERN CHRISTIAN LEADERSHIP CONFERENCE MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA
CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1957 SIGNED INTO LAW BY PRESIDENT DWIGHT EISENHOWER
INTEGRATION AT CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL LITTLE ROCK, ARKANSAS
CIVIL RIGHTS TIMELINE MOVEMENT
MANY THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE CONTRIBUTED TO THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT IN WAYS LARGE AND SMALL, BUT NUMEROUS HIGH-PROFILE EVENTS FROM 1951 TO 1968 GALVANIZED THE NATION. HERE’S A TIMELINE OF THE MAJOR MILESTONES DURING THAT PERIOD.
LUNCH COUNTER SIT-INS GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA
FREEDOM RIDES
MOBS ATTACK FREEDOM RIDERS IN VARIOUS SOUTHERN CITIES
UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI DESEGREGATED OXFORD, MISSISSIPPI
THE BIRMINGHAM CAMPAIGN BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA
MEDGAR EVERS MURDERED JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI
MARCH ON WASHINGTON WASHINGTON, D.C.
BOMBING OF 16TH STREET BAPTIST CHURCH BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA
CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964 SIGNED INTO LAW BY PRESIDENT LYNDON B. JOHNSON
“BLOODY SUNDAY” ON THE EDMUND PETTUS BRIDGE SELMA, ALABAMA
VOTING RIGHTS ACT SIGNED INTO LAW BY PRESIDENT LYNDON B. JOHNSON
MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. ASSASSINATED MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE
CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1968 SIGNED INTO LAW BY PRESIDENT LYNDON B. JOHNSON
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1965
1954
1956 1962
1960 1964
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History comes alive at Harpers Ferry National Historical Park in the eastern Panhandle of West Virginia. Come explore this official destination along the U.S. Civil Rights Trail. You’ll discover incredible stories and wonderful small-town charm at this confluence of history and nature. WVtourism.com
Rich history. To enrich your visit.
Harpers Ferry
By Art Meripol,
Of Faith and Foot Soldiers
BY BRIAN JEWELL
There are few American stories more compelling than those of the civil rights movement.
Throughout the 1950s and ’60s, activists, faith leaders, educators, students and everyday citizens fought long odds and entrenched opposition in an effort to secure equality, respect, voting rights and more. The stories of their struggles, sacrifices and victories reverberate in historic sites and cultural institutions around the country. And they are being told in a variety of new and innovative ways by members of the U.S. Civil Rights Trail.
The U.S. Civil Rights Trail is a cooperative effort to showcase more than 140 historic sites, churches, museums and other places of interest integral to the civil rights movement. The trail stretches from Topeka, Kansas, to Wilmington, Delaware, to Sarasota, Florida.
Since its launch in 2018, the trail has become one of the most admired initiatives in historic and cultural tourism, capturing worldwide media attention and winning wide acclaim. Now, five years since its inception, the trail’s leaders are finding new and more engaging ways to tell its captivating stories.
Telling Personal Stories
For many travelers, a civil rights journey begins with research. To make that research more informative and inspiring, the U.S. Civil Rights Trail Alliance launched a new version of its website, civilrightstrail. com, in February.
“We’re really excited about the new site,” said Liz Bittner, managing director of the U.S. Civil Rights Trail Marketing Alliance. “It offers more storytelling around the foot soldiers of the movement. There’s also some
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AN EXHIBIT AT NASHVILLE’S NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AFRICAN AMERICAN MUSIC DETAILS THE ROLE MUSICIANS PLAYED IN THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT.
courtesy USCRT
U.S. Civil Rights Trail presents a uniquely American story
The experience is unforgettable . Because the lessons should never be forgotten .
There’s no better place to learn about the struggle for black equality while walking in the footsteps of the Movement’s heroes. It’s all here, from the world-class Mississippi Civil Rights Museum to the many important historical sites and monuments on the Mississippi Freedom Trail. Plan your journey today at VisitMississippi.org/CivilRights.
University of Mississippi Civil Rights Monument Oxford, Mississippi
beautiful photography we have gone out and shot. It absolutely conveys the feelings and experiences you can get by visiting the sites on the trail.”
Capturing and telling first-person stories from foot soldiers and others involved in the civil rights movement is taking on increasing importance as time goes on. Since the events took place in the 1950s and ’60s, participants who were teenagers at the time are now reaching later stages of life.
“It has been 60-plus years, so capturing their stories is definitely on a final countdown,” Bittner said. “So in addition to our website and videos, that’s why we have launched a whole series of podcasts that have been wildly successful. They have allowed a great number of first-person stories to be told. If we don’t get the stories now, we’ll never get them.”
Spotlight on Education
In addition to launching the new website, the trail alliance is working on highlighting the importance of education in the civil rights movement and commemorating the role that educators and others played in ending school segregation and preparing Black children for the future.
“Next year will be the 70th anniversary of the Brown v. Board of Education decision,” Bittner said. “In addition to the Brown v. Board of Education National Historic Site in Topeka, there were a number of other schools that were very instrumental in desegregation — places like Central High School in Little Rock and the William Frantz school in Louisiana. There’s a site in Orangeburg, South Carolina, that we’re working toward having on the trail. It gives them a network to connect to the whole conversation around school segregation. That’s one of the things that makes the trail really exciting.”
In addition to showcasing education-related sites, the trail alliance is also working on initiatives to better fund, restore and preserve significant historic places, many of which are too often overlooked.
“We’re looking to elevate some of the existing sites to be national historic sites through the National Park Service,” Bittner said. “That changes the ability
to protect those sites in the long term. That can include places like the Medgar Evers site in Mississippi. Many of those sites struggle with funding. And even for the well-funded, well-loved ones, having so many visitors is hard on those buildings, because many of them weren’t built as museums. We work on marketing these sites and telling their stories. But we would be remiss if we didn’t also offset with that with protection and funding.”
A Growing Audience
From launching the new website to adding trail sites and pursuing NPS status, the goal of the U.S. Civil Rights Trail remains the same — to expose more people around the world to the incredible stories of America’s civil rights movement.
“We’d like to see visitation to the sites continue to grow,” Bittner said. “There are some initiatives to build in more guide services and more storytelling docents available in the communities where the sites are. Whether it’s schoolchildren or older adults who are in a learning mode, or a general family that’s visiting, it’s one thing to look at a building. But it’s a much more moving experience if someone explains the story to you. They can talk about the people and touch your soul. We need people to do that.”
Bittner said the alliance also plans to continue its efforts to see some of the country’s most significant civil rights destinations inscribed as UNESCO World Heritage Sites, with hopes that it will happen in 2024.
That global recognition would help amplify the trail’s key message: that America’s civil rights story is for everyone.
Travelers planning a trip on the U.S. Civil Rights Trail can find all the latest news about civil rights sites and events at:
“It’s not just an African American story,” Bittner said. “It’s important for all of humanity. And when you’re visiting Atlanta, Selma, Little Rock or Topeka, it absolutely doesn’t matter what you came for. These sites are worth a visit.”
10 CIVILRIGHTSTRAIL.COM
THE NEW U.S. CIVIL RIGHTS TRAIL WEBSITE SHOWCASES PERSONAL STORIES OF CIVIL RIGHTS ACTIVISTS.
Multiple Sites
Single Site
CIVIL RIGHTS AND MISSOURI
A 200-YEAR STORY
Missouri is home to places, people and events that have impacted the fight for racial equality. Experience their stories at these locations.
Explore more Missouri civil rights stories at VisitMo.com
KANSAS CITY INDEPENDENCE
ST. LOUIS
NEGRO LEAGUES BASEBALL MUSEUM KANSAS CITY
DISCOVER THE STORIES OF TRAILBLAZERS WHO BROKE THE COLOR BARRIER LIKE JACKIE ROBINSON AND BUCK O’NEIL.
HARRY S. TRUMAN PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY & MUSEUM INDEPENDENCE
OLD COURTHOUSE ST. LOUIS
EXPLORE THE LEGACY OF HARRY S. TRUMAN, WHO DESEGREGATED THE ARMED FORCES THROUGH EXECUTIVE ORDER.
LEARN ABOUT DRED AND HARRIET SCOTT AND THE INFAMOUS SUPREME COURT DECISION REGARDING THEIR FREEDOM.
EXPERIENCE THE MOVEMENT
EDUCATION TOWNS MUSEUMS
LITTLE ROCK CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL WAS THE SITE OF A WATERSHED SCHOOL INTEGRATION STRUGGLE IN 1957.
A Birthright to Learn
Brown v. Board of Education approaches 70th anniversary
BY BRIONA LAMBACK
It’s been nearly 70 years since Brown v. Board of Education changed the face of schooling in America.
The landmark Supreme Court decision ending segregation in American schools was handed down in 1954 and was a turning point in the civil rights movement. But it wasn’t the only significant education-focused event. From studentled school strikes to full-on physical integration efforts, the fight for African Americans to receive a fair and equal education didn’t come easily. Plenty of leaders, students, activists and everyday civilians organized to ensure everyone had the same birthright to learn.
As America prepares to celebrate the 70th anniversary of Brown v. Board next year, here are five education sites along the U.S. Civil Rights Trail worth planning a trip around.
Courtesy USCRT
STORIES RESTAURANTS
Central High School
LITTLE ROCK, ARKANSAS
Things were supposed to be changing for the better. The federal government made desegregation a law, but in the fall of 1957, when nine African American students courageously tried to make their way through the front doors of the all-white Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas, things turned ugly. Governor Orval Faubus called in the National Guard to block the Little Rock Nine’s way, and chaos ensued, with thousands of white protesters angrily pushing back against their integration efforts.
Later on September 25, President Dwight Eisenhower called in federal troops for backup to enforce the law. The Little Rock Nine were escorted to class and became symbols of bravery in the integration struggle during the civil rights movement.
Today, students of all colors attend Central High. And in addition to being home to the historic public high school, the campus also contains a visitors center run by the National Park Service. Group leaders can arrange tours to look at this critical piece of civil rights education history. Though they aren’t allowed inside the school, groups can explore the visitors center and museum and see nearby Magnolia Mobil Gas Station — once the heart of Little Rock’s live media reporting during the civil rights movement.
“It’s a very visual experience [and] very hands-on for all kinds of learners — auditory and visual,” said Brian Schweiger, chief of interpretation at Little Rock Central High School National Historic Site.
Schweiger encourages visitors to take a walk around the site, mainly through the Commemorative Gardens, where there’s a photo exhibition of Central High’s history. For an immersive audio experience, he recommends visitors download the National Park Service app or enhance the tour with a podcaststyle history of the school done in partnership with current students there.
NPS.GOV/CHSC
Brown v. Board of Education National Historic Site TOPEKA, KANSAS
Long considered one of the most critical turning points in U.S. education history and the civil rights movement, the Supreme Court’s 1954 decision in the Brown v. Board of Education was a landmark victory. Today, Brown v. Board of Education National Historic Site in Topeka, Kansas, preserves the site of one of the schools involved in the case and is worth planning a trip around.
Visitors will learn about the five individual lawsuits, all with the same goal of ending segregation, that were combined by the Supreme Court to challenge the fallacy of separate but equal public schools.
It was a time of deep inequality in the school system, and students and their families refused to stop fighting until the landmark Supreme Court case outlawed segregation nationally, changing the educational landscape forever.
For visitors looking to immerse themselves in the inner workings of the case, the Brown v. Board of Education National Historic Site has extensive exhibitions, including a film that explores racism and segregation history. There’s a photo gallery documenting the years leading up to the Supreme Court decision and a legacy room that speaks to the impact and importance of Brown v. Board of Education.
“Prepare for an impactful experience,” said Nicholas Murray, park ranger of interpretation, education, and visitor services at the site. “Our exhibits are designed to be emotionally impactful. Right away, when you walk into the building, we have segregated signs up to get you in the mindset of what it was like to live in a segregated society.”
NPS.GOV/BRVB
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Courtesy NPS
Courtesy NPS
BROWN V. BOARD OF EDUCATION NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE
MAGNOLIA MOBIL GAS STATION AT CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE
What Does It Mean To Speak Truth To Power?
The answers to that question are found in the stories and legacies of the Civil Rights Movement when people from all walks of life joined forces around a collection of related themes: the right to vote, opportunities for employment, fairness in and quality of education, and access to public accommodations to advance the ideals of a nation.
www.kentuckytourism.com
To learn how singing music, the refusal to move from a restaurant counter, a declaration of non-compliance, the skills of a master negotiator and a student sit-in all contributed to dramatic change in our country, come explore the U.S. Civil Rights Trail in Kentucky. UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY LIBRARIES SPECIAL COLLECTIONS RESEARCH CENTER
SEEK Museum
RUSSELLVILLE, KENTUCKY
One of Russellville, Kentucky’s most notable figures of the civil rights movement was Alice Allison Dunnigan, a native of Logan County who fiercely fought in the struggle for equal rights. From the very beginning, Dunnigan, a teacher in Kentucky’s segregated schools, fought for improved facilities and resources, going so far as to create learning materials that included the Black history often left out of textbooks.
“She went to segregated schools in Kentucky, a segregated college, which became Kentucky State, and then came back to teach in segregated schools,” said Joseph Clark of the SEEK Museum. “So throughout her life, education was a big part of the stories she wrote and the issues she addressed.”
Dunnigan went on to become the first Black woman to attend White House, Congress and Supreme Court press briefings. And she never took a back seat in those rooms but instead asked poignant questions to raise the public’s consciousness about segregation and Black voting rights.
Dunnigan’s legacy is celebrated at the SEEK Museum’s Payne-Dunnigan House. While walking through the home where she lived for decades, visitors can immerse themselves in the history of her work and the impact of other Kentuckians who fought for civil rights.
SEEKMUSEUM.ORG
MCDONOUGH 19 & WILLIAM FRANTZ ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS
SEEK MUSEUM
McDonough 19 and William Frantz Elementary Schools
NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA
New Orleans’ Lower 9th Ward was once home to McDonough 19 Elementary School, the fiery site of the 1960s integration struggle when three first-graders, Leona Tate, Gail Etienne and Tessie Prevost, helped desegregate their school. Although this was years after the Brown v. Board of Education ruling, many Southern schools had resisted the change. As with most other school integration struggles during the Civil Rights Movement, racists fiercely opposed it. When Tate, Etienne and Prevost first attempted to enter the school, they were heckled and spit on by white protestors. Federal troops were called in as violence grew too intense for the 6-year-olds. On their first day, the girls spent most of their time in the principal’s office before being escorted and confined to a single classroom for the entirety of the school year.
But the story of the McDonogh Three doesn’t end there. After the
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HONORING ACTIVIST EDUCATORS AT THE TEP CENTER
Courtesy KY Tourism
Courtesy TEP Center Courtesy TEP Center
It All Started Here...in Virginia. Experience it for yourself. virginia.org/blackhistory
Barbara Johns Memorial Statue - Richmond
school building sat vacant for years, Leona Tate’s foundation raised enough money to purchase the facility. Today, the TEP Center is a cornerstone of the Lower 9th Ward community. The mixed-use building provides senior affordable housing, spaces for community groups and a living museum documenting the visual and oral histories of those who lived in the community during the civil rights era through postHurricane Katrina.
Tremaine Knighten-Riley, program director, said The TEP Center recently completed a $16.2 million renovation of historic McDonough 19.
“When folks come, they are initially immersed into the feeling of what Leona, Gail and Tessie experienced,” Knighten-Riley said. Visitors walk up the 18 steps and into the principal’s office exhibit before retracing the student’s efforts from the morning of the integration attempt to their isolating classroom experience on a guided tour that transports visitors back to that time.
A few minutes around the corner was William Frantz Elementary school, where another 6-year-old, Ruby Bridges, integrated into her school as its first Black student. Today, the building is used as a charter school, Akili Academy. Bridges’ legacy is preserved with a courtyard statue and a classroom restored to its original design, available for touring. Visitors wanting to experience the facility should contact the school directly to book a private tour.
TEPCENTER.ORG
AKILIACADEMY.ORG
MCDONOUGH 19 & WILLIAM FRANTZ
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS
Dorchester Academy
MIDWAY, GEORGIA
Located on the Georgia coast, Midway’s Dorchester Academy was a pillar of Black education during the civil rights movement. Now a museum, it began as a one-room schoolhouse and eventually became a key meeting place for 1960s civil rights leaders like Martin Luther King Jr. and Ralph Abernathy. Leaders strategized, planned and trained freely at the academy, which also served an integral part in educating Black adults. It’s here that educator Septima Clark helped busloads of adults learn how to read, write and do the math needed to help them pass anti-Black voter registration quizzes. Dorchester also became a safe haven for activists to let their hair down and rest from their tireless work.
DORCHESTER ACADEMY
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Courtesy TEP Center/LTFC
Courtesy Explore Georgia
— TREMAINE KNIGHTENRILEY, THE TEP
CENTER
“When folks come, they are initially immersed into the feeling of what Leona, Gail and Tessie experienced”
Explore historic sites across South Carolina that pay tribute to the brave men and women who fought against inequality as you learn more about the fight for civil rights in South Carolina on a new podcast, “A Legacy of Courage,” at SCLegacyofCourage.com
The 30-acre campus was a remarkable place for all kinds of education, with students being trained in trades like blacksmithing and carpentry upon graduation. And the school graduated the first class of 12th-graders in the state’s history. But it was a challenging road. Many of Dorchester’s students walked dozens of miles each way to attend school.
Today the academy is a history museum, community center and an upand-coming community educational and research center. Travelers can join weekly guided tours of the grounds or plan a trip around events like the annual Walk to Dorchester, which takes place every Juneteenth in honor of the students who walked and worked hard for their education at a time when it didn’t come so easy.
DORCHESTERACADEMYIA.COM
BRIGGS AND DELAINE FAMILY BIBLES
ORANGEBURG, SOUTH CAROLINA
Years before the 1954 landmark Supreme Court case Brown v. Board of Education, a district court in South Carolina heard Briggs v. Elliott. In this case, parents and community members in Clarendon County, South Carolina, challenged school segregation. Initially, they petitioned for school buses to take Black children to schools like they took white students too. When the schools failed to consider their request, Harry Briggs and other parents sued R.W. Elliott, the president of the school board. Reverend Joseph DeLaine was a school principal who brought in the NAACP to help and recruited parents to be plaintiffs. While the ruling of the Briggs v. Elliott case only doubled down on separate but equal schools, the case was later brought up again in the Supreme Court when it was combined with others into the Brown v. Board of Education case. The Briggs and DeLaine family Bibles are on display in the Cecil Williams Civil Rights Museum. These treasured family Bibles reinforce the importance of religion to many who participated in the fight for racial equality.
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Courtesy Explore Georgia
A DORMITORY ROOM USED BY MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. AT DORCHESTER ACADEMY
Courtesy Cecil Williams Civil Rights Museum
EXTRAORDINARY
Discover the NC historic sites that pioneered the Civil Rights Movement: INTERNATIONAL CIVIL RIGHTS CENTER & MUSEUM MLK MEMORIAL GARDEN ESTEY HALL AT SHAW UNIVERSITY FEBRUARY ONE MONUMENT HAYTI HERITAGE CENTER
EXPERIENCE THE MOVEMENT
EDUCATION TOWNS MUSEUMS
THE IDYLLIC TOWN OF HARPERS FERRY WAS THE SITE OF ONE OF AMERICA’S FIRST CLASHES OVER RACIAL EQUALITY.
Above Their Weight
BY RACHEL CRICK
Steeped in the beauty of the Southeast, small towns on the U.S. Civil Rights Trail offer more than scenery and charm; they’re a testament that the smallest places can set the stage for some of the biggest changes.
The historic buildings, monuments and landmarks on the trail were once sites of protests, secret meetings and, sometimes, tragedies that occurred during the civil rights movement. In each city, visitors will find not only history but also inspiration in true stories of courage and leadership.
Travelers looking to delight in historic architecture, nature and diverse cuisine while gaining perspective about one of the nation’s most critical social movements should add these towns to their itineraries.
Courtesy WVDOT
Small towns played huge roles in the quest for equality
STORIES RESTAURANTS
Selma, Alabama
In 1865, the Battle of Selma in Selma, Alabama, ended in a crushing defeat for the Confederacy as Union soldiers destroyed the Confederacy’s arsenal about a month before the Civil War’s end. One hundred years later, Selma was the site of one of the most significant events in the civil rights movement — Bloody Sunday. To protest the obstacles faced by Black voters and the murder of activist Jimmie Lee Jackson, peaceful demonstrators attempted to march across Selma’s Edmund Pettus Bridge and were met with violence at the hands of state troopers. Footage of the brutal attacks shocked the nation and eventually spurred the passage of the 1965 Voting Rights Act.
Today, groups traveling to Selma can visit the bridge, one of many important sites on the Civil Rights Trail, and the National Park Service’s nearby interpretive center. Other important sites include the Tabernacle Baptist Church, where the first mass meeting of the voting rights movement was held, and Brown Chapel, the site of preparations for the march from Selma to Montgomery. Fans of the movie “Selma” can see the Jackson House, which was featured in the film and hosted Martin Luther King Jr. when he stayed in town.
One of the most powerful ways for groups to experience Selma’s extensive civil rights history is with the city’s foot soldiers — tour guides who participated in the march when they were students.
“When you meet one of them, they share their experiences of what they experienced during the movement,” said Sheryl Smedley, executive director of the Selma and Dallas County Chamber of Commerce and Tourism Information.
In addition to its many historic landmarks and its featured spot on the U.S. Civil Rights Trail, Selma is known for its hospitality and good Southern cooking. Travelers can eat at Lannie’s BBQ, a well-known stop for a hot meal with a side of history.
SELMAALABAMA.COM
EDMUND PETTUS BRIDGE
Sarasota, Florida
In 1927, the winter headquarters of the Ringling Brothers Circus was moved to Sarasota, Florida. The Ringlings had long been established in Sarasota, and at one point owned as much as a quarter of the town’s land, inextricably linking the history of this Florida beach town with the Greatest Show on Earth. There are nods to the circus’ legacy throughout the city, from the Circus Ring of Fame, where groups can explore the legacies of circus performers, to the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art, which is both the state art museum of Florida and the city’s No. 1 attraction.
Sarasota has another major historical draw to the area: Lido Beach, the southernmost point on the U.S. Civil Rights Trail. In the 1950s and ’60s, African Americans were allowed to use less than two miles of Florida’s 2,000 miles of shoreline. Demonstrators began staging “wadeins” at Lido Beach that called national media attention to the issue and advanced the fight against segregation.
“There was a very key victory for Black and brown people when the NAACP asserted its right to the beach,” said Vickie Oldham, local historian and president and CEO of the Sarasota African American Cultural Coalition Inc.
Once they’ve taken in Sarasota’s history, travelers can visit the Selby Botanical Gardens, where they’ll see exotic plants from around the world. At the Mote Marine Laboratory and Aquarium, they can see and learn about the many species of marine life in Sarasota through interactive exhibits. To enjoy elegantly plated continental fare in the ambience of a historic building, visitors can dine in what was once John Ringling’s office at Café L’Europe. For a more casual atmosphere, they can head to Der Dutchman Restaurant, which serves traditional Amish family recipes and homemade pies.
VISITSARASOTA.COM
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Courtesy Visit Sarasota
NEWTOWN CIVIL RIGHTS TRAIL
Courtesy AL Tourism
VINTAGE CIVIL RIGHTS ORGANIZATION PINS
LITTLE ROCK, ARKANSAS
The Mosaic Templars Cultural Center, an African American history museum in Little Rock, is dedicated to telling the stories of the Mosaic Templars and African Americans in Arkansas, from their struggles against inequality to their everyday lives and triumphs. The center’s artifacts include personal effects of the people who lived during or were inspired by the civil rights movement, from newspaper clippings and magazines to art. The center has several exhibits dedicated to the display of buttons, pins and magnets from important organizations within the movement. One exhibit features an NAACP member pin from 1947, a Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) member pin from the 1960s and a National Black Convention pin from 1974. These vintage pins demonstrate the importance of membership in Black American organizations uniting to fight for a common goal, as well as how long these organizations have been vital to civil rights causes.
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Courtesy AL Tourism
SELMA’S TABERNACLE BAPTIST CHURCH
By Art Meripol, courtesy USCRT
Courtesy Mosaic Templars Cultural Center
EXTRAORDINARY
BROWN CHAPEL AME CHURCH IN SELMA
Harpers Ferry, West Virginia
The picturesque, hilly town of Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, can be found at the convergence of the Potomac and Shenandoah rivers, surrounded by the Harpers Ferry National Historical Park. The red brick buildings, lush forests and rushing rivers make Harpers Ferry seem like something out of a storybook, but there’s more to this idyllic town than meets the eye; in 1859, it was the site of the famous raid led by abolitionist John Brown, who attacked the federal armory in an attempt to lead an uprising and end slavery. Harpers Ferry is also home to Storer College, the first school in the state that educated former slaves. This educational institution was where W.E.B. DuBois held the 1906 conference that planted the seed for the formation of the NAACP.
To learn more about Black history in the area, travelers can follow in the Jefferson County African American Heritage Trail. Sites one through 10 on the trail are located in Harpers Ferry, including the fort where John Brown’s attempted raid took place, the John Brown Museum and Storer College, which features three rooms of exhibits. Visitors can also participate in ghost tours of Harpers Ferry for a spookier take on local history.
There are many opportunities to enjoy the beautiful natural scenery of Harpers Ferry. The town marks the halfway point on Appalachian Trail, and travelers can walk a portion of the trail up to Jefferson Rock, an interesting rock formation that overlooks the Shenandoah River. To refuel, visitors can grab something sweet at True Treats Historic Candy, the only historic candy shop in the country. For something more filling, they can grab a bite at the Anvil Restaurant, which serves a variety of seafood and classic dinner staples.
DISCOVERITALLWV.COM
HARPERS FERRY NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK
Canton, Mississippi
With a beautiful Greek Revival courthouse as its centerpiece and rows of multicolored buildings surrounding it, the Courthouse Square District in Canton, Mississippi, can be found on the National Register of Historic Places. While its historic square charms visitors, Canton is also home to many historic sites and important figures in the civil rights movement. The city is committed to preserving and highlighting its diverse history, which is why it created the Canton Multicultural Center and Museum, a museum showcasing the cultural heritage of many of Canton’s residents and the causes they advocated for.
“We of course have a very diverse community,” said Jo Ann Gordon, director of the Canton Convention and Visitors Bureau. “We celebrate
CANTON COURTHOUSE
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Courtesy WVDOT
Courtesy WVDOT Courtesy Canton CVB
HARPERS FERRY SCENERY
many cultures in the area, and in our town, and we have always had the wonderful opportunity to have the African American experience here.”
To learn more about its extensive history in the civil rights movement, groups can take the African American Historical Heritage Driving Tour, which originates in the Canton Welcome Center. From there, a step-on guide will narrate the journey through Canton and the surrounding area, pointing out critical stops on the Civil Rights Trail, such as the Canton Freedom House, where important figures in the movement such as Martin Luther King Jr. organized protests, and the Historic Madison County Courthouse, where demonstrators showed up to register to vote despite the many obstacles placed in their path.
The city has a rich history in the film industry because of the multiple movies shot there and is often referred to as the film capital of Mississippi. Travelers can even visit the original Warner Brothers set of the movie “A Time to Kill” at the Canton Movie Museums. Visitors can round out their itineraries with the variety of fare Canton’s restaurants offer, from traditional Southern cooking to fine dining.
CANTONTOURISM.COM
CANTON MOVIE MUSEUMS
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Courtesy Canton CVB
A city that
our storied
help
Come Visit Mobile and help us write our next chapter. HERITAGE
embraces
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DANVILLE VIRGINIA
Danville, Virginia
As the last standing Confederate capital, the quiet city on the Dan River known as Danville, Virginia, was long a source of racial tension. In 1960, Black students staged a sit-in at the Danville Public Library. Rather than allow them to simply do their schoolwork, the library closed altogether. Other protests followed, including the events of Bloody Monday, when demonstrators were met with police brutality.
Today, the same building that once denied entry to its Black citizens is now the Danville Museum of Fine Arts and History, where an exhibit titled “The Movement” presents testimonies of the protestors who staged the sit-in and depicts the struggles they faced in the oftendangerous fight for equality. Several other notable historic landmarks can be found in Danville, including High Street Baptist Church, where activists organized demonstrations. They can visit the museum and nearby landmarks to learn about the extensive role the city played in the civil rights movement.
History buffs will also appreciate Danville’s AAF Tank Museum, dedicated to showcasing a collection of military tanks and related artifacts from the 16th century to the present. For a range of hands-on exhibits and live demos related to the STEM field, travelers can visit the Danville Science Center, which includes a butterfly garden from April to October.
Danville is home to a number of breweries and wineries for visitors to enjoy, including Ballad Brewing, a craft brewery producing delicious local IPAs and ales. For upscale entrees and waterfront views, visitors can head to Cotton at Riverside Mill on the banks of the Dan River.
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Photos by Jane Lamay, courtesy VTC
DANVILLE’S HIGH STREET BAPTIST CHURCH
A CIVIL RIGHTS HISTORY MARKER IN DANVILLE
“MY GREATNESS CAME AND STARTED IN LOUISVILLE. ”
- Muhammad Ali
Louisville’s native son, beloved around the world, left a legacy that has reached far beyond the boxing ring. One of the newest stops on the U.S. Civil Rights Trail, the Muhamad Ali Center is an awardwinning museum dedicated to showcasing Ali’s boxing career, humanitarian efforts and larger than life personality.
Learn more at GoToLouisville.com/Ali
EXPERIENCE THE MOVEMENT
EDUCATION TOWNS MUSEUMS
THE SMITHSONIAN’S NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY AND CULTURE DETAILS THE STRUGGLES AND TRIUMPHS OF BLACK PEOPLE IN AMERICA.
Landmark Stops
These civil rights museums are travel icons
BY ALYSE TATUM
On the U.S. Civil Rights Trail, museums are more than the sum of their artifacts.
With historic exhibits, multimedia presentations and moving experiential programs, museums make learning personal. And institutions dealing with America’s civil rights journey impact many visitors in a deeply personal way.
The museums along the U.S. Civil Rights Trail preserve some of the most important objects, documents and landmarks of the past and present, ensuring history is not forgotten. At the same time, they are also making themselves more accessible with resources like virtual tours and interactive programs.
Here are five significant civil rights museums sure to make a deep impact on travelers.
Courtesy NMAAHC
STORIES RESTAURANTS
Birmingham Civil Rights Institute
BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA
The Birmingham Civil Rights Institute (BCRI) is a cultural and educational research center located in Birmingham, Alabama. Since its founding in 1992, the BCRI has been dedicated to educating the public about the civil rights movement and its impact on the world today. The BCRI is committed to conserving the legacy of the civil rights movement, advancing the work of social justice and assuring the fight for equality continues.
Inside the BCRI, visitors will find exhibits that chronicle the civil rights movement in Birmingham and how it affected the entire nation. Highlights include photographs, artifacts and interactive displays such as a statue depicting Rosa Parks sitting on a bus. Visitors can also learn about Birmingham’s history through interactive programs and workshops held at the institute.
“The BCRI offers educational programs for students and adults, including a summer camp and a student leadership program,” said Barry McNealy, historical content expert at the museum.
“We also host a variety of events throughout the year, including lectures, film screenings and special events.”
BCRI.ORG
BIRMINGHAM CIVIL RIGHTS INSTITUTE
Mississippi Civil Rights Museum
JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI
The Mississippi Civil Rights Museum is a powerful and meaningful institution that has been open since 2017. Located in Jackson, Mississippi, the museum is dedicated to keeping and memorializing the significant moments of the civil rights movement in the state while giving special attention to the murders of Medgar Evers and Emmett Till. The museum is a place of learning and reflection, a testament to the resilience and courage of those who fought for civil rights in Mississippi.
The museum is divided into eight galleries, chronologically telling each phase of the state’s history between 1845 and 1976. The galleries feature exhibits on slavery, the Civil War, World War II, the history of segregation and discrimination, the struggle for voting rights, and the fight for justice and equality. The last gallery, titled “Where Do We Go from Here?” encourages the museum’s attendees to reflect on what they saw and learned from the eight galleries.
Guests are also invited to read what Mississippians think about the state’s progress over the years and what still needs to be done. Visitors can also explore these exhibits through interactive displays, audio recordings and video presentations.
The Mississippi Civil Rights Museum also has a library that includes books, magazines and other materials related to the civil rights movement.
MCRM.MDAH.MS.GOV
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Photos courtesy BCRI
Courtesy BCRI
A ROSA PARKS EXHIBIT AT THE BIRMINGHAM CIVIL RIGHTS INSTITUTE
Courtesy ATD A STATUE IN KELLY INGRAM PARK NEAR THE BIRMINGHAM CIVIL RIGHTS INSTITUTE Courtesy MS Civil Rights Museum .com one visit, big on little rock. and you’ll be TESTAMENT: THE LITTLE ROCK NINE MONUMENT .com MISSISSIPPI CIVIL RIGHTS MUSEUM MISSISSIPPI CIVIL RIGHTS MUSEUM Guests are also invited to read what Mississippians think about the state’s progress over the years and what still needs to be done.
Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum INDEPENDENCE, MISSOURI
The Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum in Independence, Missouri, preserves the legacy of the 33rd president of the United States and serves as a repository for documents and artifacts related to his life and presidency.
The library holds a variety of documents, including official presidential papers, correspondence, photographs and other materials. Visitors to the library can take a self-guided tour of the museum, which includes exhibits on Truman’s early life, his presidency and his post-presidency years. In addition, the library has an extensive collection of books, periodicals and other materials related to Truman and his presidency.
The Truman Library is included in the U.S. Civil Rights Trail because of President Truman’s efforts to end segregation among the military, as well as his enforcement of anti-lynching laws and ending poll taxes that were used as a tactic to keep Black citizens from voting.
At the museum, visitors will learn about Truman’s personal process of transformation. As a child, the president was taught all races were not equal. He was cited using racial slurs and even working with the Ku Klux Klan during his first run for a political office. Later in his presidency, though, Truman was made aware that Black veterans were being brutally beaten and even lynched. As a veteran himself, Truman found this revelation unconscionable and started a civil rights committee and enforced the equality laws.
TRUMANLIBRARY.ORG
761ST TANK BATTALION EXHIBIT
By Art Meripol,
LOUISIANA
Like virtually every other sphere of life in the early 20th century, the U.S. Army was initially segregated. Black troops were expected to lay down their lives for their country just like white troops while experiencing segregation and discrimination. The 761st Tank Battalion challenged these long-held practices in the army and contributed to its desegregation in 1948. Formed in Louisiana in 1942, this tank battalion was an experimental unit entirely comprising Black soldiers. They fought in France in 1944 and 1945, experiencing 183 days straight of combat and liberating 30 cities on their way to Germany. They were the first African American tankers to see combat and became renowned for their strength and skill in battle. Their efforts directly contributed to the end of World War II. They were known as the Black Panthers, after the animal they chose for their emblem. Today, items from this battalion and an exhibit telling their story are on display at the Louisiana Maneuvers and Military Museum at Camp Beauregard.
LIBRARY
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HARRY S. TRUMAN PRESIDENTIAL
courtesy ADT
Courtesy HTPL
PINEVILLE,
Courtesy LA Maneuvers and Military Museum
They were the first African American tankers to see combat and became renowned for their strength and skill in battle.
EXTRAORDINARY
International Civil Rights Center and Museum
GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA
In 1960, four African American college students in Greensboro, North Carolina, entered an F.W. Woolworth and sat at the whites-only lunch counter, demanding to be served. This event sparked a wave of sit-ins across the country and helped to shape the future of the civil rights movement.
That building is the home of the International Civil Rights Center and Museum (ICRCM). It was created to commemorate that pivotal moment in the civil rights movement. Founded in 2010, the ICRCM is dedicated to those brave students, who had a significant impact on the civil rights movement.
The museum features a variety of exhibits that tell the story of the civil rights movement and its impact. Visitors can explore interactive displays, watch videos and view artifacts from the era. The museum also hosts lectures, workshops and other educational programs.
The ICRCM serves as a reminder that the struggle for civil rights is ongoing and we must continue to work together to ensure all people have equal rights and opportunities. SITINMOVEMENT.ORG
National Museum of African American History and Culture
WASHINGTON, D.C.
The National Museum of African American History and Culture is a Smithsonian Institution museum located on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. Opened in 2016, the museum is dedicated to the documentation of African and African American life, history and culture. The museum is home to more than 37,000 artifacts, including the earliest surviving copy of the Emancipation Proclamation, a segregated Southern Railway car and a Tuskegee Airmen flight suit.
The museum’s permanent exhibitions detail the African American experience from the Middle Passage to the present day. Visitors can explore the history of the civil rights movement, the impact of slavery on the United States and the contributions of African Americans to the nation’s culture and society. The museum also features interactive exhibits, films and educational programs.
The National Museum of African American History and Culture is an important resource for understanding the African American experience. Its collections and exhibitions provide insight into the struggles, triumphs and ongoing legacy of African Americans in the United States.
The museum is free to visit, but timed entry tickets are required. NMAAHC.SI.EDU
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NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY AND CULTURE Located in the heart of Downtown Louisville! 144 N. 6th Street Louisville, Kentucky alicenter.org REQUEST INFORMATION ABOUT GROUP TOURS! Tours Department 502.992.5340 education@alicenter.org THE
STOP
Enjoy Louisville’s premier cultural museum for inspiration, history, entertainment and more! Explore The Greatest’s legacy— from his humble Louisville roots to his legendary journey as an athlete, social justice advocate, cultural icon, and global humanitarian.
Courtesy ICRC Courtesy NMAAHC
MUHAMMAD
ALI
CENTER IS AN OFFICIAL
ON THE U.S. CIVIL RIGHTS TRAIL
INTERNATIONAL CIVIL RIGHTS CENTER
Creativity.Heritage.Inspiration.
At the heart of America’s inland waterways, you’ll find a sophisticated rivertown that inspires. Paducah, Kentucky, is a confluence of cultural heritage and creativity where art goes beyond something to appreciate – it’s a way of life.
A designated UNESCO Creative City, Paducah is gaining acclaim as a destination for those who crave rich, authentic cultural experiences!
COMES ALIVE History
Walk in the footsteps of Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong at the Hotel Metropolitan and African-American Heritage Museum.
Plan your experience at Paducah.travel
1-800-PADUCAH
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EDUCATION TOWNS MUSEUMS
RUTHA HARRIS, CENTER, AND HER FREEDOM SINGERS SHARE THE LEGACY OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT THROUGH MUSIC IN ALBANY, GEORGIA.
Living Legacies
Civil rights heroes still share their stories
BY BRIONA LAMBACK
The civil rights movement is more than just history.
Though the key events in the struggle for civil rights took place in the 1950s and ’60s, the values and convictions behind them are still alive today. And many of the people who participated in the marches, sit-ins, meetings and boycotts are still alive too.
At sites along the U.S. Civil Rights Trail, visitors can meet locals who lived through the movement and hear their perspectives on what took place. Many of their stories have also been recorded and published as part of the U.S. Civil Rights Trail Podcast.
Here are five stories from the podcast series that will inspire visitors to take their own civil rights journeys.
Courtesy GA DED
STORIES RESTAURANTS
Valda Harris Montgomery MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA
Most people haven’t seen the things a young Valda Harris Montgomery witnessed during the civil rights movement. When she was just 13, a beaten and battered John Lewis showed up at her family’s Montgomery, Alabama, home in need of care and refuge. What would’ve been a shock for most wasn’t for Harris Montgomery because, during the movement, Black people were used to witnessing — or being victims of — racial attacks.
Harris Montgomery inadvertently had a frontline view of the movement, and her father’s work kept her family there. Because he was a fierce supporter of civil rights, Harris had opened his home as a haven and a strategic meeting place for leaders like King, John Lewis, Diane Nash and more. Once, Harris opened the family home to 33 student Freedom Riders, who were attacked during the Montgomery Greyhound Bus Station integration challenge.
Harris owned Dean Drug Store, the city’s oldest Black-owned drug store, where he operated a lunch counter specifically for Black folks to have a safe place to dine. He also provided medical assistance during the historic Selma to Montgomery march for voting rights.
But Harris Montgomery didn’t always recognize the magnitude of what was happening in her home until decades later. King was a good neighbor, who had once knocked on her family’s door covered in bandages after being stabbed. Harris Montgomery’s recent memoir, “Just A Neighbor: A Child’s Memoir of the Civil Right Movement,” details living in the Centennial Hill neighborhood of Montgomery during such a pivotal time in history.
Today the Richard Harris House is a museum and cultural center open for tours by appointment.
EXPERIENCEMONTGOMERYAL.ORG
VALDA HARRIS MONTGOMERY
RUTHA HARRIS
Rutha Harris ALBANY, GEORGIA
Rutha Harris played a unique role in the civil rights movement: using her vocal chords to fight for freedom. Harris is one of the original Freedom Singers (along with Bernice Johnson Reagon, Cordell Reagon and Charles Nesbett), an Albany, Georgia, singing group that existed to educate their people about the movement through song. The group performed at festivals across the country and at the White House. Their most notable performance was at the 1963 March on Washington, long considered a turning point in civil rights history.
Songs like the civil rights classic “Freedom Is a Constant Struggle” were in her powerful repertoire of protest music. Harris once said, “The reason I joined is that I thought I was free, and the reason I thought I was free is because my mother and father had sheltered us [Harris and her siblings] from all of that stuff. So I thought we were free, but we were not free.”
With this realization, Harris began singing for freedom, but her work didn’t end there. She was also active in voter registration drives, marches and mass meetings.
Harris is still doing the work important to Black freedom by leading oral history presentations that give firsthand accounts of her experiences during the Albany movement, using powerful narration and song performances to keep this incredible history alive.
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Courtesy GA DED
JIM STEWART’S VIOLIN
MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE
Stax Records, originally founded in Memphis in 1957 as Satellite Records, is perhaps one of the most influential soul and R&B record companies. One of its founders, Jim Stewart, had humble origins in the music industry as a country fiddle player and later decided to branch out into producing records. As a white man, his willingness to work with Black artists made him somewhat of an anomaly within the segregated South. However, this pioneering spirit resulted in great strides in Memphis and the music industry. Stax played a critical role in the creation and development of soul music and R&B, working with greats like Otis Redding, Aretha Franklin, Ike and Tina Turner, and James Brown to produce a long list of iconic songs. Stewart, who passed away in 2022 at the age of 92, dedicated the vintage violin he played when he first entered the music industry to the Stax Museum of American Soul Music, where it’s now on display.
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S T OOD MEMPHISTRAVEL.COM EXTRAORDINARY
Courtesy STAX Museum
TA N D WHERE UPSTAND E RS
Joan Garner BATON ROUGE, LOUISIANA
Joan Garner is a tour guide at the West Baton Rouge Museum in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and her job is much deeper than a passionate pastime. Garner continues the impactful work of her father, John Garner, one of the Southern University student leaders who participated in Baton Rouge’s groundbreaking lunch counter sit-ins at Kress Department Store. John Garner was named in a lawsuit — Garner v. State of Louisiana — where the Supreme Court ultimately ruled that nonviolent civil rights protestors could not be prosecuted for disturbing the peace.
Today, Joan Garner is working tirelessly to right the wrongs of the past.
“For me, it’s about legacy,” she said. “It’s all about legacy.” And Garner doesn’t take her family’s legacy lightly. She wants it to be known the course of her father’s life changed forever, impacting his education and career path.
“The students were actually expelled from the school or suspended indefinitely, so in 2004 Southern University issued honorary degrees to these students,” she explained. “In my father’s case, he received an honorary law degree, but he didn’t ask for that. What he was actually asking for was an apology.” That apology still hasn’t come.
Joan Garner remains committed to telling the stories of the sit-ins and does so through lectures at the West Baton Rouge Museum. She’s also working on projects like preserving a historic cemetery for formerly enslaved people and restorative justice initiatives.
VISITBATONROUGE.COM
Percy Green III ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI
When Percy Green III climbed to the top of St. Louis’ Gateway Arch on July 14, 1964, he wasn’t concerned about making history. He was standing up for his people. But his decision to climb the arch to protest racial discrimination was monumental for the movement.
In the words of Green, “we were not concerned or conscious of making history. We were trying to be effective in our protest to expose racial discrimination on a federally funded project.” No Black people were employed as workers or contractors on the building of the Gateway Arch.
Green was a member of the city’s CORE (Committee on Racial Equality), a national civil rights organization, before leaving to form his group, ACTION (Action Council to Improve Opportunities for Negroes). He believed it was necessary to create a St. Louis-specific organization that focused on addressing issues and taking action against the inequalities in their communities.
Green’s militant approach was strategic, often organizing protests he knew would generate a buzz and bring media attention to the systemic racism Black people were facing. “We didn’t have the tools that protestors do today,” he said. “Social media is powerful. I wish I had it at the time, but during that time we did well with what we had. We had to play jujitsu with the news media.”
PERCY GREEN III
Today, he remains supportive of the protest movements continuing to happen and believes they’re needed to make the changes necessary. “I’m still an active participant in various ways of support [like] counseling the younger who want to know what it was like back then [and] sharing with them the strategies and tactics that we used.”
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Photos courtesy Joan Garner
Courtesy MO SHS
JOAN GARNER
Located
The Beaufort County Black Chamber of Commerce is a nonprofit, membership organization, dedicated to the economic empowerment of African American communities and small businesses
“We didn’t have the tools that protestors do today. Social media is powerful. I wish I had it at the time, but during that time we did well with what we had. We had to play jujitsu with the news media.”
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JOHN GARNER ON THE POLICE FORCE
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Clinton 12
CLINTON, TENNESSEE
It was 1956 when 12 courageous Black students integrated an all-white high school in the small east Tennessee town of Clinton, making history as the first desegregated public high school in the South. Before the monumental event, Black students weren’t allowed to attend school in the county and had to travel over 40 miles to Knoxville. They’d registered successfully to enroll in the school, but their actual journey inside the walls of Clinton High School didn’t come as quickly, and just a few days later, things worsened.
Trace the Paths They Walked
From the Emmett Till story that began at Bryant’s Grocery to the “Black Power” speech made by Stokely Carmichael at Broad Street Park, Greenwood witnessed firsthand a slow, but certain shift in the winds of justice. It was a gathering spirit of hope, promise and determination that awakened the nation and mobilized the American Civil Rights Movement
We welcome group tours and invite you to learn more about our ties to this monumental movement.
Find your beat from the Heart of the Delta: Greenwood, Mississippi.
John Kasper, a known Ku Klux Klan member, caught wind of the integration news and came to town and went door-to-door to stir up outrage in the Clinton white community. Just days after, the Clinton 12 stood atop the hill, prayed for their safety and made their way to the front doors.
Joann Boyce, a then-junior, recalls that morning: “We were on pins and needles. How are we going to be accepted when we go down the hill? How will we be accepted when we go inside the school?
“The pledge we made was that we’re going to walk down the hill. We’re going to walk with our heads held high, and we are going to show bravery, and that’s exactly what we did.”
In the face of their bravery, the Clinton 12 were met with progressively worse aggression from white adult protestors, who harassed and assaulted them outside of school and students who taunted them inside the school. But they kept going in pursuit of equal education.
The Clinton 12 integration is often overlooked throughout similar historical events like Arkansas’ Little Rock Nine, which happened a year later. Still, Clinton is crucial to Tennessee and U.S. history, too.
Travelers can visit the Green McAdoo Cultural Center in Clinton, where 12 life-size bronze statues commemorate the Clinton 12. Inside the center is a museum full of exhibitions that re-create what it would have been like to attend high school during that period. There are replica classrooms, an exhibit on the school’s bombing and a documentary from the civil rights era.
ADVENTUREANDERSON.COM
CLINTON 12
Courtesy Green McAdoo Cultural Center
A CLINTON 12 EXHIBIT AT THE GREEN MCADOO CULTURAL CENTER
GREENWOOD, MISSISSIPPI
Emmett Till Statue
Bryant’s Grocery 1955 f : Travelgreenwoodms l : @travelgreenwood GREENWOOD CONVENTION AND VISITORS BUREAU 225 Howard St., P.O. Drawer 739 Greenwood, MS 38935 PH: (662) 453-9197 VISITGREENWOOD.COM
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PATRICE BATES THOMPSON KEEPS A NEIGHBORHOOD SOUL FOOD LEGACY ALIVE AT THE FOUR WAY IN MEMPHIS.
Food for Thought
Enjoy iconic restaurants on the U.S. Civil Rights Trail
BY NASHA SMITH
Food is the unofficial love language of the Black family.
Meals cultivate community, nourish the soul, create connections and preserve traditions. But food has also played a pivotal part in the struggle for Black equality. In the United States, civil rights leaders like Martin Luther King Jr. would meet up with other activists to discuss the day’s events after marches over generous portions of soul food from the few restaurants that were safe havens. The term “soul food” itself emerged from a desire to reconnect with the diaspora through Southern and African-influenced cuisine.
Today, several Black-owned restaurants continue to serve up sumptuous meals while honoring the past and Black heritage. Here are some notable dining establishments travelers can enjoy while visiting cities on the U.S. Civil Rights Trail.
By Alex Shanksy,
courtesy The Four Way
STORIES RESTAURANTS
Magnolia House GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA
During the period of racial segregation in America, African Americans were not allowed to share accommodations, eating or drinking facilities with Caucasians. The “Negro Motorist Green Book” became a critical resource for Black travelers. Within its pages was a comprehensive list of hotels, restaurants, gas stations, barber shops, drug stores and other amenities that were available to African American travelers. One of those safe spaces in the guide was the Magnolia House, a hotel in Greensboro, North Carolina, and one of the few green book sites for those shuttling between Atlanta and Richmond. Among those seeking refuge at the Magnolia House were prominent writers, artists, musicians, actors, and athletes, including James Brown, Joe Tex, Tina Turner, Jackie Robinson, James Baldwin, Sam Cooke and Ray Charles. Nods to their famous guests are peppered throughout the property’s programming.
“One of the biggest things that Magnolia House does is promote the idea of music and jazz, because we had so many musicians traveling and spending time here,” said Yvon’ne Lyle, the restaurant’s social media coordinator. “They would come and play music, eat and just play for the guests. So we continue to do that. We have events, we have live jazz music, and we have partnerships with the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, where their jazz groups will come and play music, especially during Black History Month.”
Another ode to the greats lies in their soul food-heavy menu. The Catch 42 is a play on the number worn by baseball star Jackie Robinson, who broke the sport’s color barrier in 1947. The Southern-inspired meal features fried catch of the day, creamy grits, tomato, lemon oil and fresh herbs. The Gladys is the namesake of the “Empress of Soul” Gladys Knight. The fried chicken biscuit served with local hot honey butter was the go-to order of the famed songstress. James Baldwin’s favorite meal of New York strip steak, soft scrambled farmers’ eggs with cheese, and fingerling potatoes is also a consistent crowd-pleaser.
THEHISTORICMAGNOLIAHOUSE.ORG
HISTORIC MAGNOLIA HOUSE
Shirley Mae’s Café
LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY
Fresh food has always been Shirley Mae’s competitive edge. It’s why the café that sits at the corner of Clay and Lampton streets in downtown Louisville, Kentucky, features an open kitchen that allows customers to see behind the scenes of their food preparation. This transparency, coupled with made-to-order soul food like Southern fried chicken wings, barbecued ribs and meatloaf, is a major part of the café’s charm.
But proprietress Shirley Mae Beard is as well known for her contributions to Black history and its preservation as she is for her hot water cornbread. Most notable is her commitment to honoring Black jockeys in the city and state at the center of one of the most prestigious horse racing events in the world: the Kentucky Derby. Black horsemen were once a dominant force at the Derby, making up 13 of 15 riders at the first running in 1875 — and won by Black jockey Oliver Lewis — and winning 15 of the first 28 runnings of the equine event. As Kentucky ramped up segregation laws in the 1890s, Black riders were systematically barred from the sport.
After discovering the accomplishments of these hidden figures in a set of World Book Encyclopedias, Beard, with the help of her children, made it her mission to educate the masses. The Salute to Black Jockey event was born in May 1989, with photos of the riders covering the café walls and the introduction of what is billed as the “largest inner-city carnival in the commonwealth of Kentucky.” The annual event is a popular draw, prompting visits from Academy Award-winning actors Whoopi Goldberg and Morgan Freeman.
Shirley Mae’s has been operating on a carry-out basis since the start of the pandemic, as a safety precaution and to minimize contact with the now 82-year-old matriarch. But the beloved local institution is gearing up to welcome diners back for the homecooked meals they have come to crave.
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SHIRLEYMAESCAFE.COM
Photos courtesy Historic Magnolia House
Shirley Mae Beard
is as well known for her contributions to Black history as she is for her hot water cornbread.
MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. DOCUMENTS
ATLANTA
Few figures in the civil rights movement are more recognizable than Martin Luther King Jr. King was emblematic of the movement during the 1950s and ’60s, providing leadership, courage and wisdom that inspired individuals of many races and backgrounds to fight for equality and cling to hope for a just world. His speeches and sermons, such as the famous “I Have A Dream” speech, were catalysts for social change and racial equality, even after his 1968 assassination in Memphis. The National Center for Civil and Human Rights in Atlanta houses an exhibition called “Voice to the Voiceless,” which features artifacts of King’s from the Morehouse College Martin Luther King Jr. Collection. The exhibition includes some of King’s papers and letters, 1,100 books from his personal library and an art installation featuring a backlit display of his unique handwriting stretching 38 feet across 50 metal panels, titled “Fragments.”
By Justin Chan, courtesy NCCHR
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MIDCENTURY DECOR AT GREENSBORO’S HISTORIC MAGNOLIA HOUSE
SHIRLEY MAE’S CAFE
EXTRAORDINARY
The Four Way Soul Food Restaurant
MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE
Irene and Clint Cleaves opened the Four Way Grill in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1946 with one goal: to serve the best soul food in the city. Clint, a driver for former Memphis Mayor E.H. Crump, worked with his wife Irene to develop the eatery from a small, unassuming counter tucked into a pool hall to a full-scale dining area. In the turbulent civil rights era, The Four Way became one of the few dining establishments where Black and white customers could break bread together. Word quickly spread of the flavorful, well-seasoned fare in the aptly named Soulsville neighborhood, and everyone from Martin Luther King Jr. to Elvis Presley and B.B. King came through the doors.
As Black people fought for equal rights and social justice, churches and restaurants became safe spaces for their organizing efforts, and the Four Way was an integral part of the movement. Dr. King was said to be partial to Irene’s fried catfish, fried chicken and peach cobbler during his stops in the city.
Both Clint and Irene have passed on, but their legacy in the city renowned for its roots in blues, soul, and rock ’n’ roll is unassailable. Local son Willie Bates and a partner purchased the iconic restaurant in 2001, and since his death in 2016, his daughter Patrice Bates Thompson has kept the spirit of the legendary establishment alive and flourishing. Their fried entrees are still the heart and soul of the menu, with thick slabs of cornmeal-crusted catfish, crunchy fried chicken and perfectly battered countryfried steak smothered in gravy.
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SOUL FOOD TWIST
THE FOUR WAY SOUL FOOD RESTAURANT
By Alex
Soul Food Twist
HUNTINGTON, WEST VIRGINIA
Chef Joanna “Jojo” Williams remembers vividly when the first seeds of a culinary future were planted.
“I used to always watch my daddy cook his mac and cheese and help my mother peel fresh potatoes for the potato salad,” Williams said. She was determined to one day have a food truck or restaurant of her own, as she honed her skills at the popular restaurant chain Waffle House. Williams took the first steps toward realizing that goal four years ago when she began cooking out of her Huntington, West Virginia, home.
Her opportunity came at what might seem to some like a decidedly inopportune time: during the COVID-19 pandemic. She opened her restaurant Soul Food Twist when other establishments were closing, and it flourished amidst the chaos. Williams attributes her success to the element of surprise.
“What makes us [different from] any other soul food restaurant is the name itself, because I always throw a twist out,” she said.
The menu changes constantly, with new options added daily. But even with a menu in a state of flux, there are some surefire standouts.
“The [meal] people must try when they come to my location is the barbecue meatballs and smoked pull pork,” Williams said. She also recommended their succulent salmon, which is paired with a creamy alfredo pasta, tender smoked ribs and the signature “mac attack,” which has been voted among the top 10 best dishes in Huntington for three years.
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Courtesy Soul Food Twist
Shanksy, courtesy The Four Way
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Mama J’s Kitchen RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
A trip to Mama J’s Kitchen is akin to Sunday dinners at grandma’s house: filled with warmth, love and good food. It’s a replication of Velma Johnson’s — known locally as Mama J — upbringing as one of 14 children in the West End neighborhood of Richmond, Virginia. Johnson grew up sharing the kitchen with her mom and grandmother as they prepared their customary large Sunday dinners. During these formative years, she not only acquired culinary skills but also learned the secrets and nuances of family recipes that now make up the restaurant’s menu. But Mama J’s is not just a rich, soul food dining experience. It is also a key part of a redevelopment of Historic Jackson Ward, one of America’s oldest districts and once a bustling center of African American commerce and entrepreneurship. The Richmond area once known as the “Harlem of the South” was a response to Jim Crow laws limiting where Black residents were allowed to live. Black people had no choice but to create their own community spaces with banks, restaurants and other businesses. Jackson Ward’s music scene also
MAMA J’S KITCHEN
thrived as Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald, Lena Horne, Cab Calloway, Billie Holiday, Nat King Cole and James Brown became regulars at the Hippodrome Theater. Unfortunately, redlining and other discriminatory policies would lead to the eventual downfall of the vibrant district.
When Johnson’s eldest son, Lester, and his best friend, Jonathan Mayo, saw an opportunity to help lead the renaissance of Jackson Ward decades later, they knew that Mama J’s comfort food was the recipe they needed. With a menu featuring an assortment of meats, fresh-fromthe-oven cornbread and decadent peach cobbler, it’s hard to disagree.
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Photos courtesy VTC
MAMA J’S KITCHEN IN ONE OF RICHMOND’S HISTORICALLY BLACK NEIGHBORHOODS
EVERY SECOND SATURDAY EACH MONTH,
VISIT THE CITY WHERE VOICES
ELEVATED A MOVEMENT.
During the Albany Movement, thousands of citizens attracted nationwide attention in the first mass movement in the modern civil rights era with the goal of desegregation of an entire community. When you visit the Albany Civil Rights Movement Museum, you’ll hear the stories, feel the songs and see the people who helped change the course of history. And gave momentum to a movement.
Learn more about why Albany, GA is an important stop on the Civil Rights Trail by visiting AlbanyGACivilRights.com.
WHERE history AND nature flow
——————————————————
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the Albany Civil Rights Institute Freedom Singers narrate Albany Movement stories with dynamic testimony and emotionally-charged performances.
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