Lodging Leaders

307 | ‘A National Story’: Black travel in America evolved with the Civil Rights Movement

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Sinopsis

Noelle Trent is director of interpretation, collections and education at the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis, Tennessee. The museum is in the historic Lorraine Motel, where the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated in 1968. The venue is hosting the Smithsonian Institution’s The Negro Motorist Green Book exhibition, which tells the history of Black travel in mid-20th-century America. In this report, Long Live Lodging explores how African Americans travelers learned to safely navigate the nation’s highways and byways during the age of segregation. We also feature the Lorraine Motel and its enduring significance to racial equality in America. The post 307 | ‘A National Story’: Black travel in America evolved with the Civil Rights Movement first appeared on Long Live Lodging.