United States Civil Rights Trail Logo
*Congress formed the United States Civil Rights Trail on this date in 2014. This is an American heritage trail in the Southern United States that provides visitors with stories about the American Civil Rights movement stories at various landmarks.
The Civil Rights Trail links historically important Black churches, school museums, civil rights leaders' residences, courthouses, and other landmarks of the civil rights movement in the 1950s and 1960s and the creation of the U.S. Constitution's 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments. Following the Dalai Lama's 2014 tour of the Birmingham Civil Rights District, U.S. President Obama instructed the National Park Service to create more diversity among the nation's UNESCO World Heritage sites, focusing on civil rights. At Alabama's request in 2016, a Georgia State University team led by Glenn T. Eskew researched and identified 60 civil rights landmarks as potential UNESCO candidates.
This initiative evolved into the Alabama Civil Rights Trail. State tourism departments from Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia, collectively known as the Atlanta-based Travel South USA trade association, added more sites and formed a parallel U.S. Civil Rights Trail. Work on the Trail began in 2017 with the website CivilRightsTrail.com, which was launched on Martin Luther King Jr. Day in 2018.
The Trail includes more than 100 landmark sites in 15 states, several operated by the National Park Service (NPS). 2017 President Obama conferred NPS designations to establish the Birmingham Civil Rights National Monument, the Freedom Riders National Monument in Anniston, Alabama, and the Reconstruction Era National Historical Park in Beaufort County, South Carolina.
In 2017, the home of Medgar Evers and the Civil Rights Trail landmark in Jackson, Mississippi, was designated the Medgar and Myrlie Evers Home National Monument. In November 2019, the International Travel & Tourism Awards named the U.S. Civil Rights Trail the Best Regional Destination Campaign in its first year of eligibility. In January 2021, the Smithsonian Institution and The New York Times became the first national cultural organizations to sponsor escorted tours of the Trail, followed by international firms Abercrombie & Kent and Trafalgar Travel. Also, in January 2021, Moon Publishing released Moon U.S. Civil Rights Trail, a travel guide by Deborah D. Douglas.
The guide focuses on 16 cities with sites representative of the civil rights movement and includes history lessons and interviews with activists and important figures. The Official United States Civil Rights Trail Book, by Alabama tourism director Lee Sentell, was published in June 2021 as a companion book to the U.S. Civil Rights Trail.