Central Press/Getty Images
A walk through history: It's probably the most iconic moment of our collective memory of Martin Luther King Jr. -- his "I Have a Dream" speech from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington on August 28, 1963. Click through the gallery for photos of destinations where you can walk in MLK Jr.'s historical footsteps.
David Goldman/AP
Birth home (Atlanta): You can see the house where Martin Luther King Jr. was born and raised. Other important King sites in Atlanta are nearby. While you're there, take a stroll and look at other beautifully restored homes in the Sweet Auburn and Old Fourth Ward neighborhoods.
CNN
Historic Ebenezer Baptist Church (Atlanta): This is a sign to sacred ground in Atlanta and for the civil rights movement.
Raymond Boyd/Getty Images
Historic Ebenezer Baptist Church (Atlanta): King and his father were co-pastors at Ebenezer, which has been meticulously restored to how it appeared when they led their flock there in the 1960s.
Raymond Boyd/Getty Images
Final resting place (Atlanta): Right by Ebenezer, you'll find the tombs of Martin Luther King Jr. and his wife, Coretta Scott King, at the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change.
Shutterstock
National Civil Rights Museum (Memphis, Tennessee): MLK Jr. was assassinated on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel in 1968. Fittingly, the motel is now home to the National Civil Rights Museum.
Bob Miller/Getty Images
National Memorial for Peace and Justice (Montgomery, Alabama): The solemn memorial opened in 2018, and it has already attained must-see status for visitors to the capital of Alabama.
Raymond Boyd/Getty Images
Dexter Avenue King Memorial Baptist Church (Montgomery, Alabama): Here's a chance to see another church where MLK Jr. delivered stirring sermons back in the day. He was pastor here from 1954 to 1960, and it was from this building that he and his team made many of their important plans for the civil rights movement.
Beth J. Harpaz/AP
Dexter Parsonage Museum (Montgomery, Alabama): A tour group gathers in 2018 to see the house where King and his family lived while he served as pastor of Dexter. The house was bombed several times during his pastorship, but no one was injured during the attacks.
Raymond Boyd/Getty Images
Birmingham Civil Rights Institute (Birmingham, Alabama): Alabama's largest city holds an important place in the civil rights movement, and the Civil Rights Institute has artifacts that King aficionados will want to see.
Al Drago/Getty Images
Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial (Washington): On the National Mall, King's memorial is framed by blooming cherry trees on a gorgeous early April day in 2019.
AFP/Getty Images
Lincoln Memorial (Washington): Hundreds of thousands of people gathered for "March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom" on August 28, 1963. The stirring words King delivered from these steps echo into today.
Jacquelyn Martin/AP
National Museum of African American History and Culture (Washington): Water rains down from a cylindrical fountain as people visit the Contemplation Court at the museum. It's an ideal place to reflect on the dreams and goals that King had for his country.
Bettmann Archive/Getty Images
Boston University (Boston): New England's largest city is where MLK Jr. and Coretta Scott met and courted. He attended Boston University, and she went to the New England Conservatory of Music. In this photo, she unveils a bas relief of her late husband at Mugar Memorial Library on the BU campus.
Josh Noel/Chicago Tribune/TNS/Getty Images
Bimini, Bahamas: King visited the mangrove swamps of Bimini to write in a quiet place, leading to a memorial in the swamps.
Rita Funk/picture-alliance/dpa/AP
Cape Coast Castle (Ghana): King's first trip abroad was to Ghana to help the West African nation celebrate its independence from colonial rule in 1957. There, he saw sites such as the Cape Coast Castle, an important base for the Atlantic slave trade.
Shutterstock
Mani Bhavan (Mumbai, India): King drew much inspiration from Mahatma Gandhi's effort to liberate India from British rule. During a tour of India, King visited Mani Bhavan, which served as Gandhi's Bombay headquarters for many years. It's now a museum.

Editor’s Note: Sign up for Unlocking the World, CNN Travel’s weekly newsletter. Get news about destinations opening, inspiration for future adventures, plus the latest in aviation, food and drink, where to stay and other travel developments.

CNN  — 

Martin Luther King Jr. was born and raised in the American South, but his dream of racial equality and social justice reverberated out of his region, into the whole country and around the world. And it wasn’t just his vision that spanned the globe – the man himself embarked on travels far and wide.

You can honor him on Martin Luther King Jr. Day (Monday, January 15) – or any other time of year – by walking in his footsteps figuratively or literally.

From his homeland in the heart of the South to unexpected destinations far beyond America’s shores, here are the places that shaped and inspired the man:

Atlanta, Georgia

Raymond Boyd/Getty Images
Historic Ebenezer Baptist Church is one of Atlanta's most cherished sites.

Georgia’s busy capital city is King’s birthplace and his final resting place. As such, it probably has the biggest claim on his legacy and MLK-related sites.

Many of them are clustered together at the MLK Jr. National Historical Park in the Sweet Auburn neighborhood of downtown Atlanta, including the tombs for MLK and Coretta Scott King.

Some of the highlights include:

Historic Ebenezer Baptist Church: This is where MLK was baptized and where he co-pastored with his father starting in 1960. It’s been magnificently restored inside and out to how it appeared in the 1960s and is an ideal place for prayer and quiet reflection. 407 Auburn Ave. NE, Atlanta, GA 30312.

MLK Birth Home: You can tour the two-story house where MLK was raised, when Sweet Auburn was the epicenter for African American life in Atlanta. 501 Auburn Ave NE, Atlanta, GA 30312.

The King Center: Coretta Scott King established the The Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change in 1968. Almost 1 million people would visit annually pre-pandemic to learn more about the Kings’ public and private lives and to pay their respects at their tombs, the reflecting pool and the eternal flame. 449 Auburn Ave. NE, Atlanta, GA 30312.

Just a few miles away, prestigious Morehouse College is King’s alma mater. (In fact, MLK Jr. was one of numerous King family men to attend college there). The campus grounds are a lovely place to take a stroll where the young collegian walked. 830 Westview Dr. SW, Atlanta, GA 30314.

Memphis, Tennessee

For a city of its size, Memphis has an outsized influence on the nation’s musical, cultural and political history. The United States was deep in turmoil and scarred by violence when King came to Memphis in March 1968 in support of striking sanitation workers.

King and his group were booked at the Lorraine Motel, a safe and welcoming place to stay for black travelers at the time. On April 4, King was standing on the balcony outside of room 306 when he was shot and killed.

Today, the Lorraine is the site of the National Civil Rights Museum, where you can learn about the broad sweep of civil rights history as well as see the room where the man who changed America spent his final living hours.

On the Monday holiday, the museum is hosting an all-day celebration that will include children’s activities and live entertainment as well as a food drive. Admission to the museum on Monday will be free from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. A new exhibition, “Tarred Healing,” featuring photography by Cornell Watson, opens on Monday. 450 Mulberry St., Memphis, TN 38103.

If you would like to also eat where King often broke bread, visit the soul food restaurant The Four Way. Opened since 1946, it serves Southern favorites such as fried chicken, turnip greens and lemon meringue pie (said to be an MLK favorite). 998 Mississippi Blvd., Memphis, TN 38126.

Montgomery, Alabama

04:13 - Source: CNN
A lynching memorial remembers the forgotten

It’s difficult to overstate the impact of King’s time in the segregated capital of Alabama during the mid-1950s. His coordination of the long bus strike after Rosa Parks famously refused to yield her seat put him on the national and international map.

Today, Montgomery has numerous must-see civil rights attractions, including:

• The outdoor National Memorial for Peace and Justice, which explores the history of lynching, Jim Crow laws and more. 417 Caroline St, Montgomery, AL 36104.

• The indoor Legacy Museum, about 1 mile away from the memorial. It’s situated on a site where Black people were forced to labor in bondage. 400 N.Court St, Montgomery, AL 36104.

Both were founded by the Equal Justice Initiative and will be open on Monday for MLK Day with free admission.

• The Rosa Parks Museum at Troy University, which is dedicated to Parks’ legacy and the lessons of the Montgomery Bus Boycott. 252 Montgomery St, Montgomery, AL 36104.

Dexter Avenue King Memorial Baptist Church: This church was founded in 1877 in a slave trader’s pen and was originally called Second Colored Baptist Church. King served as its pastor from 1954 to 1960. It was from here he planned the bus boycott and other efforts to dismantle segregation. Tours of the church are by appointment; you can visit on Sunday morning for worship. 454 Dexter Ave, Montgomery, AL 36104.

Dexter Parsonage Museum: This is the clapboard house where King lived – and which was bombed several times during the civil rights struggle. Open Fridays and Saturdays; otherwise by appointment. 309 S Jackson St, Montgomery, AL 36104.

Enjoy some food and history at Brenda’s Bar-Be-Que. During the Montgomery bus boycott, organizers gathered at the restaurant and Black people were taught how to read and write there so they could pass literacy tests and vote. Menu favorites for locals include ribs and a pig ear sandwich.1457 Mobile Road Montgomery, AL 36108.

Birmingham, Alabama

Raymond Boyd/Getty Images
The Birmingham Civil Rights Institute has the jail door from King's incarceration.

The industrial powerhouse of the South and a bedrock of integration opposition in the mid-20th century, Birmingham also figured prominently in King’s life.

It was from Alabama’s largest city, after all, that he penned his famous “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” in 1963, in which he passionately defended nonviolent civil disobedience to skeptical white ministers who questioned his tactics and perceived impatience at the pace of change.

You can see the actual door from his jail cell at the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute as well as important documents and oral histories from the civil rights movement. 520 16th St N, Birmingham, AL 35203; +1 205 328 9696

Kelly Ingram Park, which was a gathering spot for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and other groups in the civil rights movement, has sculptures depicting the struggle. 5th Avenue N & 16th Street.

Washington, DC

Al Drago/Getty Images
You'll find the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial on the National Mall between the Lincoln and Jefferson memorials.

It now seems inevitable that King’s march for justice took him beyond the Deep South to the nation’s capital. Here are some places you can visit:

Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial: The first memorial to honor an African American individual on the National Mall, it opened to the public in 2011 and features a powerful 30-foot statue of King emerging from boulders. You can also read inspirational quotes made in carvings on the site. 1850 West Basin Drive SW, Washington, DC 20024 (closest Metro station is the Smithsonian)

The Lincoln Memorial: Fittingly, it was from the steps of this beloved memorial that King gave his most famous speech – “I Have a Dream.” Sit on the steps, close your eyes and just imagine the atmosphere there on August 28, 1963, as more than a quarter of a million people filled the National Mall to hear what became one of the most important speeches in US history. 2 Lincoln Memorial Cir NW, Washington, DC 20037

The National Museum of African American History And Culture: The museum made an excellent addition to the capital’s many fine institutions when it opened in 2016. The museum contains artifacts directly related to King as well as a sweeping look at the contributions and tribulations of Black Americans. 1400 Constitution Ave NW, Washington, DC 20560

Boston, Massachusetts

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images
Coretta Scott King unveils a bas relief of her late husband at the Mugar Memorial Library on the Boston University campus.

While several cities in the South claim part of the King legacy, it may surprise some folks to know that Boston, that bastion of New England, also was a key place in shaping his life.

Before returning to the South, King attended Boston University in the early 1950s. Just as you can walk in the undergraduate’s footsteps at Morehouse in Atlanta, you can do the same for grad student King at BU. 771 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, MA 02215.

You may want to go to the grounds of the impressive Massachusetts State House, where King addressed a joint session of the legislature in April 1965. 24 Beacon St, Boston, MA 02133

You can also see a 22-foot memorial called The Embrace in Boston Common park that commemorates MLK and Coretta Scott King. This is the city, after all, where they met and where they began married life.

Bimini, Bahamas

Josh Noel/Chicago Tribune/TNS/Getty Images
Did you know you can combine a Bahamas getaway with an MLK Jr. history tour?

Combine a gorgeous island getaway with some MLK history on Bimini, the western most outpost of the Bahamas and just 50 miles off the coast of Florida.

King would come here to relax and craft his speeches, including notes for his Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech he gave in Oslo, Norway, in 1964.

CNN Travel’s Lilit Marcus reported in a 2018 article that “there are two busts of King on the island – one in front of the Straw Market in the center of Alice Town and one among the very mangroves where King spent so many peaceful afternoons.”

Ghana

Rita Funk/picture-alliance/dpa/AP
A visit to the Cape Coast Castle in Ghana is a painful but necessary reminder of the Atlantic slave trade that went on for centuries.

The civil rights struggles in the United States and the end of colonialism in Africa came at the same time and naturally the movements dovetailed.

In 1957, the Kings went to Ghana in West Africa to attend its independence ceremony from Britain, according to the King Encyclopedia at Stanford University. In the capital of Accra, he met then-Vice President Richard Nixon, among others.

His first overseas trip, Ghana had a profound effect on King. Upon his return to the United States, he said, “Ghana has something to say to us. It says to us first, that the oppressor never voluntarily gives freedom to the oppressed. You have to work for it.”

Before the pandemic, Ghana was emerging as a prime tourist destination not just in West Africa but the entire continent. While many people come for the beaches, wildlife and food, it also holds important historical sites.

Those include Cape Coast Castle, which was a hub of the transatlantic slave trade. A visit there is a somber reminder of centuries of oppression and its ramifications during MLK’s time up to today. Victoria Road, Cape Coast, Ghana, +233 57 710 1707

India

Shutterstock
If you visit Mani Bhavan, the museum that was once Mahatma Ghandhi's center of operations, you'll have once again walked in the footstepls of MLK Jr.

Mahatma Gandhi’s crusade of nonviolent resistance to liberate India from British rule deeply influenced King.

In February and March of 1959, King embarked on a five-week tour of India to learn more about the movement that inspired him. In Delhi, he met with Prime Minister Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, among others. He talked with students at New Delhi University.

Eventually he made his way to Calcutta (now called Kolkata), India’s intellectual center. Martin Luther King Sarani, a street named for him in the heart of the city, is not far from the Victoria Memorial.

In Bombay (now called Mumbai), King visited Mani Bhavan, which is where Gandhi worked and lived for 17 years. Today, it’s a museum where you can see artifacts from Gandhi’s life. 19, Laburnum Raod, Gamdevi, Mumbai-400 007, India.

Online

If you’re simply not able to make it to any of these places in person this year, trace the journeys of King online at Stanford University’s extensive King Institute. It’s a deep dive into his life, yet easy to navigate.