In this itinerary, student and youth groups can walk in the footsteps of the Civil Rights movement in Birmingham, Alabama, and learn lessons for the future.

“There is no better way to learn history than to walk in the very footsteps of those who devoted their lives to equality,” said Sara Hamlin, vice president of tourism at Greater Birmingham Convention & Visitors Bureau. “Birmingham’s Civil Rights District and National Monument are a profoundly moving journey through the revolution of the 1960s. It was a time of crushing repression on one hand and the belief in a better tomorrow on the other. Birmingham was Ground Zero for the Civil Rights Movement. It offers lessons today that can be learned only in the city that changed the world.”


Start the morning with a tour of the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute. The institute documents the rise of the Civil Rights Movement and the succession of events it bore around the nation: the 1955 arrest of Rosa Parks on a Montgomery bus; James Meredith’s 1962 admission to the University of Mississippi; the violence in 1963 in the streets and churches of Birmingham.

Across the street is Birmingham’s most famous civil rights landmark, the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church. The church and the city drew worldwide attention on September 15, 1963, when Denice McNair, 11, Addie Mae Collins, Cynthia Wesley and Carole Robertson, all 14, were killed in a Ku Klux Klan bombing there. The tour includes an optional video that addresses the bombing.

Adjacent to the institute and the church is historic Kelly Ingram Park. The park served as a congregating area for demonstrations in the early 1960s, including the ones in which police dogs and fire hoses were turned on marchers by Birmingham police. Sculptures throughout the park depict the events of 1963, and a cellphone tour narrates the occurrences. At the park entrance is a life-size sculpture that captures the spirited nature of the young girls killed when the bomb detonated.

Just down the street is the Eddie Kendricks Memorial Park, honoring Birmingham native and Temptations lead singer Eddie Kendricks. The Kendricks statue captures for eternity the magic moves of his Motown music.

Eddie Kendricks Memorial Park, Birmingham, Ala.
Credit: Art Meripol

Other suggested places of interest along the Civil Rights Tour are Miles College and Bethel Baptist Church. Opened in 1908 to provide training for African American teachers and ministers, Miles continues to offer degrees in liberal arts in a small co-educational setting.

Bethel Baptist Church, Birmingham, Ala.
Credit: GBCVB

Civil Rights legend, the Reverend Fred Shuttlesworth, was pastor of Bethel Baptist Church from 1953 to 1961. The church served as a gathering place for discussions of civil rights among blacks. In the 1950s, while Shuttlesworth was pastor, the church and the parsonage were bombed on separate occasions. Remarkably, no one was injured in the attacks.


For help planning a student tour to Birmingham, call 800-458-8085 or visit inbirmingham.com.


Main image: Birmingham Civil Rights Institute, Birmingham, Ala.; Credit: GBCVB