Road Scholar launches two new trips exploring the U.S. Civil Rights Movement

The new programs help travelers learn about the roles New Orleans, Jackson, Memphis, and Nashville played in the fight for civil rights.

A woman looking at an exhibit display at the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis
(Photo: Road Scholar)

Since its debut in 2017, Road Scholar’s Civil Rights Movement tour in Alabama and Georgia has been one of the nonprofit’s most popular and impactful programs. Almost 550 travelers took part in the trip in 2025, and reviews often call it “life changing.”

In 2027, the educational travel company is launching two new trips that further explore the important period of American history: Rhythm of Resistance: Civil Rights & Jazz in New Orleans and The Civil Rights Movement in Jackson, Memphis & Nashville.

Jazz musicians at Preservation Hall in New Orleans
Preservation Hall is one of the stops on the Rhythm of Resistance tour in New Orleans (Photo: Road Scholar)

New Orleans already ranks as one of Road Scholar’s most popular destinations, and the new Rhythm of Resistance tour will explore the city’s role in the Civil Rights Movement and the impact of segregation on daily life and the evolution of jazz. Travelers will meet musicians at Preservation Hall, visit the historic Tremé neighborhood, and learn from experts at Whitney Plantation, a historic site dedicated to interpreting the history of slavery from the perspective of enslaved people.

“A civil rights and jazz program in New Orleans offers a powerful new way to experience the city by connecting two of its most influential legacies,” says Lindsey Temple, program operations director at Road Scholar. “From the fight for equality to the birth of America’s most iconic musical tradition, these stories bring New Orleans to life in a meaningful and immersive way.”

An exhibit area at the National Museum of African American Music in Nashville
At the National Museum of African American Music in Nashville, travelers will learn about the overlap of music and civil rights (Photo: Beth Luberecki)

The Jackson, Memphis, and Nashville tour will examine the defining moments and key figures of the Civil Rights Movement in each city. Travelers will visit Memphis’s National Civil Rights Museum at the Lorraine Motel, site of Martin Luther King, Jr.’s assassination; the National Museum of African American Music in Nashville; and the home of Medgar Evers and the Emmett Till Interpretive Center on the Jackson portion of the trip.

“This program was created to connect people with the living history of the Civil Rights Movement across Jackson, Memphis, and Nashville—places where ordinary individuals made extraordinary choices that helped shape our nation,” says Bobbie Duncan from the Center for Educational Adventure, which partners with Road Scholar to organize and operate the program. “By exploring these communities and hearing the stories rooted there, we hope participants leave with a deeper appreciation of the movement’s complexity, the courage it required, and a renewed sense of how its lessons about justice, dignity, and collective action still matter today.”

The first departures of the new trips are scheduled for May 2027 in honor of the 10th anniversary of Road Scholar’s inaugural Civil Rights Movement program. Both new tours are currently open for booking, as well as future dates of the original program in Alabama and Georgia.

TourScoop takeaway: Road Scholar excels at adding a strong educational element to its travel tours, helping participants to broaden their minds and look at the world in new ways. These new tours further explore an important period of American history that still has significant relevance today.

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Beth Luberecki writes about travel, business, and lifestyle topics. Her work has appeared in publications including The Washington Post, USA TODAY, FamilyVacationist.com, and The Indianapolis Star. The Florida-based writer shares her travels on her website bethluberecki.com and on Instagram at @bethluberecki and @findingfloridafun.