The U.S. Civil Rights Trail is expanding in 2026, with the addition of historic sites in Virginia, Louisiana, Tennessee and Jacksonville, Florida, offering travelers new destinations to explore pivotal stories, places, and voices that shaped the nation’s civil rights movement.
As part of this expansion, a Jacksonville Civil Rights Trail will be created. It will consist of place-based markers, education, and storytelling which will highlight where history unfolded and connect visitors to the streets, neighborhoods, and institutions where organizing took root.
The Trail will honor both landmark events and everyday leaders who worked across neighborhoods and generations to sustain the movement, inviting visitors to reflect on the power of community action to create lasting change.
“We are honored to be chosen as one of the U.S. Civil Rights Trail’s 2026 expansion locations and grateful to everyone who worked so hard to make it possible,” said Jacksonville Mayor Donna Deegan. “Each of the Jacksonville sites being added to the Trail will add unique and powerful stories that will deepen our understanding of the Civil Rights Movement and the role our city played in it.”
The Trail will consist of 40 markers, with the first five being installed in February during Black History Month. The City will install the first Trail marker in front of Mt. Ararat Baptist Church on Wednesday, February 25, 2026, at 1pm. After February, the City will install three to five markers per month.
About the U.S. Civil Rights Trail: Launched in 2018, the U.S. Civil Rights Trail is a collection of more than 130 churches, courthouses, schools, museums and other landmarks primarily in the Southern states where activists challenged segregation in the 1950s and 1960s to advance social justice. The people, locations and destinations included in the Civil Rights Trail provide a way for families, travelers and educators to experience history firsthand. For details about the sites and stories from civil rights pioneers, visit CivilRightsTrail.com.