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Travel

When in Montgomery, Alabama, You Must See This

The National Memorial of Peace and Justice. Civil Rights Memorial and vicinity. Riverwalk

Montgomery. A town easy to love, remember, and admire. This capital town has a charm like no other. History rains down its streets like a black and white film. Here is my list of what you must see when you are here.

1. The National Memorial of Peace and Justice

It is free with informative guides to help you around. Carved into its walls is poetry, arisen from the ashes underground are sculptures, or so it seems.

Days earlier, we had read names of soldiers at USS Alabama and Fort Gaines who served during World War II and the civil war. We had wondered if their descendants proudly visited to see the names shining through the plaques. When the thought about family seeing their relatives’ initials at this memorial crossed my mind, sadness boomed. Broken by state and country, engraved in columns are four thousand and four hundred names of those lynched. As you walk amongst the amber metal columns, regret folds and unfolds: why were there so many names? Why did justice take so long?

2. Downtown Montgomery

Take the easy stroll through downtown Montgomery next. We parked by the Civil Rights Memorial, our first stop. The cherry blossoms swayed overhead as we walked to the first White House of the Confederacy across from their state building. The trek to the Court Square Fountain with sculptures and quotes from Rosa Parks also fits a meal like lunch in one of the many restaurants here like the Irish Pub.

Two blocks away, the Rosa Parks Museum offers tours ranging from forty-five minutes and more with a movie. We bought Rosa Parks biography book for the family and a picture book for my youngest. We then lumbered to Hank Williams Statue leading the footpath under the railway tracks to the Riverfront Park.

3. Riverfront Park

Lastly, to soak in the historic tale of events that shaped America, ponder over the sacrifices of Rosa Parks, who had to eventually move out of Montgomery to Detroit to find a job because she sparked and led revolutionary marches, I simmered under its weight at the riverside park.

Montgomery
Riverfront Park with a Open Concert Stage, Ship, and passing trains

We spent our day well and headed back to Dauphin Island, where we had rented a beach house, just in time for another spectacular sunset. Montgomery shed light on how small I was despite having written HOUSE OF MILK AND CHEESE on the state of race relations in America. My accomplishment was nothing compared to the true heroes, who had to move, die, lose income to bring about equality. We have ways to go, but we are here because of them. Montgomery, well spent!

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Categories
Travel

When in Northern Alabama, See This

Tennessee River. Rocket Center. Ave Maria Grotto.

For spring break, we searched for a place where we could inhale the ocean salts but not sink into the crowds known to, say, Florida. The state of Alabama had never settled into a tourist destination in my head before. With this blog and next, I wish to help fellow travelers like me to find their “far from the maddening crowd” in Alabama. Today’s focus is the northern part of the state, touching Tennessee, which we haunted not too far ago.

Athens, Alabama

Tennessee River cuts through this small town, surprisingly equipped with coffee and restaurants like Atlanta bread, etc. Toward East is unbroken development until Huntsville. But fifteen minutes west of Athens, the buildings shed into sleepy farmlands, the cattle grazing over dark violet wildflowers, and the Wheeler Reservoir cultivates a habitat for birds, their songs ringing through the night. We stayed at an Airbnb on the reservoir. The view delivered its promise but not the home. Nonetheless, break that cycle of the daily grind. Come here. And relearn how to fill time with absolutely nothing, just the hum of hummingbirds, the body of sun over the water, and the carpet of purple over emerald.

Rocket Center

As you enter “Sweet Home Alabama,” a stationary rocket soars the skies. This destination is Alabama’s most widely known stop. And for nerds like me with sons like mine who fantasize about outer space, it will not disappoint. Its hours of operation between 10 a.m. and 4/5 p.m. (depending on the day) dictated we begin our day here. The lines form fifteen minutes before opening. Most visitors had booked their tickets online, but somehow, we lucked out. Not only did we gain entry, but we also beat the line. For our final destination, six hours away, ten o’clock was a late start, and the lines imperiled not only the time-crunched itinerary but the covid-weary minds as well. Everyone wore a mask. Rest assured, most of the attractions are outside, our worries ebbing in minutes.

Inside, the lunar tale, the launch capsules, the Saturn 5 rocket, the spaceships, and the ISS replica will deliver the geek fix, export you to history and the future at once. Reserve two hours for a relaxing trip to read and learn though you can comb the area in one hour.

Ave Maria Grotto

An hour south of the Rocket Center, away from the bustling, developed university town of Huntsville (falling right on our route,) is a place named Cullman, Alabama. While I am not religious or share the same religion as Brother Joseph, but this stop is for all and a must-see. It showcases outdoor cities worth of sculptures from around the world—Jerusalem, Spain, Italy, Vatican City, France, Brazil, Babylon from various periods. The precision of every rock, every glass will not only allow your legs the welcome outdoor stroll they need, but it will also mesmerize your soul with the record of events. The self-guided tour begins and ends in the gift shop, filling fifteen minutes to a half-hour with a world history tour.

My Alabama blogs will show how the state offers a diverse palate of destinations keeping the adults and children motivated, learning, and loving. After the Ave Maria Grotto, our final stop was the state’s southernmost island town named after the heir to the French throne, Louis XIV’s great-grandson, once Louisiana Territory’s capital, Dauphin Island.

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