Favorite and Hard-to-Find Places

Trust us for a unique tour experience!

We can customize a tour to the specific interests of your group to enrich your visit to Alabama.


  • Cities/Communities
  • Cemeteries
  • Historic Sites and Buildings
  • VIP Tours


Not sure what you want to visit? We can help there too. Here is a sampling of some favorite places we take visitors

  • People walking past a tall glass office building on a sidewalk.

Walk Through Civil Rights History

Explore the historic landmarks, neighborhoods, and civil rights sites that shaped Montgomery’s role in American history. Our guided tours are designed to provide a meaningful, educational experience as you visit some of the most important locations connected to the Civil Rights Movement and the people who helped define it.

Whether you're tracing the steps of Dr. King, Rosa Parks, or the local organizers who built the movement from the ground up.

Each tour offers a thoughtful look at the stories, places, and events that continue to shape Alabama's history today. Dr. Richard Bailey — president of the Alabama Historical Association — leads every tour personally, offering insight unavailable anywhere else.

Historic Sites on Our Civil Rights Tours

  • Red brick historic church with white steeple on a city street in daylight

Dexter Avenue King Memorial Baptist Church

A cornerstone of the Montgomery Civil Rights Movement, this is where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. served as pastor during the Montgomery Bus Boycott. The church played a critical role in organizing nonviolent protest strategies that helped shape national civil rights legislation. Visitors gain insight into Dr. King's leadership, the church's organizing power, and its lasting impact on American history.

  • Old red-brick church with twin towers, circular stained-glass windows, and front steps under a gray sky

First Baptist Church

Deeply tied to the leadership of civil rights strategist Rev. Ralph Abernathy — a close associate of Dr. King and co-founder of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. This historic church served as a gathering place for organizing, planning, and community support during the Civil Rights era, making it a key stop for visitors interested in the leadership behind the movement.

  • Historic marker for Dr. E. D. Nixon Sr. on a brick building exterior

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E.D. Nixon's Home

The home of civil rights organizer E.D. Nixon represents the grassroots leadership that helped ignite the Montgomery Bus Boycott. Nixon played a critical role in organizing Rosa Parks' legal defense and mobilizing early resistance efforts that led to national change. This site offers a deeper understanding of the behind-the-scenes leadership that powered the movement.

  • Brick apartment building with black doors, trimmed bushes, and a walkway in front of the lawn.

Rosa Parks Apartment

Rosa Parks lived here at the time of her historic arrest that sparked the Montgomery Bus Boycott. This stop allows visitors to connect personally with one of the most recognized figures in American history and understand the real-life conditions that led to a defining moment in the Civil Rights Movement.

  • Red brick church with tall cross and arched entrance on a street corner

Holt Street Baptist Church

One of the earliest mass meeting locations during the Montgomery Bus Boycott. Thousands gathered here to vote on continuing the boycott — a turning point in organized civil rights protest. This site remains a powerful symbol of unity, strategy, and collective action in Montgomery's history.

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