العناصر | Echoes of a Dream.Walking the March at Night
Echoes of a Dream.Walking the March at Night
Northwest Washington
نبذة
Walk the Dream Where It Still Echoes
As the sun sets and the daytime crowds begin to disappear, Washington, D.C. becomes quieter, more reflective, and more powerful. In that setting, the story of the March on Washington comes alive in a way that feels personal and unforgettable.
This night walking tour invites you to do more than learn history. It invites you to walk through it.
On August 28, 1963, more than 250,000 people came to Washington to demand jobs, justice, and freedom in one of the most important demonstrations in American history. On this tour, you will follow the ground they walked and relive the meaning of that day in the city where it happened. You will learn the behind scen...
ما تشمله الجولة
٢ ساعات
مُقدم في الإنكليزية
إلغاء مجاني
بطاقة رقمية
٢ ساعات
مُقدم في الإنكليزية
إلغاء مجاني
بطاقة رقمية
ما تشمله الجولة
سماعات الرأس
نقاط التلاقي
الانطلاق
National Museum of African American History and Culture
We will meet in front of the National Museum of African American History and Culture Madison Dr. entrance at 6:45 pm
العودة
Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial
The tour will end at the Martin Luther King Memorial
المعلومات المهمة
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تسهيلات لدخول المعاقين
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يمكن للرضع والأطفال الصغار الركوب في عربة الأطفال أو عربة الأطفال
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مسموح بحيوانات الخدمة
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تتوفر خيارات النقل العام في مكان قريب
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يمكن الوصول إلى جميع المناطق والأسطح بواسطة الكراسي المتحركة
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لا ينصح به للمسافرين الذين يعانون من إصابات في العمود الفقري
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لا ينصح به للمسافرات الحوامل
سياسة الإلغاء
للحصول على استرداد كامل للمبلغ، قم بإلغاء الحجز قبل ٢٤ ساعة على الأقل من موعد المغادرة المقرر.
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لاسترداد المبلغ بالكامل، يجب الإلغاء قبل 24 ساعة على الأقل من موعد بدء التجربة.
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يُعرض وقت انتهاء الحجوزات بالتوقيت المحلي.
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إذا قمت بالإلغاء قبل أقل من 24 ساعة من وقت بدء الجولة، فلن تتمكّن من استرداد المبلغ الذي دفعته.
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لإجراء هذه الجولة، يجب توافر حدّ أدنى من المسافرين. إذا تم إلغاؤها بسبب عدم استيفاء الحد الأدنى، فسوف يُعرض عليك إمكانية اختيار تاريخ/تجربة مختلفة أو استرداد المبلغ بالكامل.
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لن يتم قبول أي تغييرات تجريها قبل أقل من 24 ساعة من وقت بدء الجولة.
As the sun sets and the daytime crowds begin to disappear, Washington, D.C. becomes quieter, more reflective, and more powerful. In that setting, the story of the March on Washington comes alive in a way that feels personal and unforgettable.
This night walking tour invites you to do more than learn history. It invites you to walk through it.
On August 28, 1963, more than 250,000 people came to Washington to demand jobs, justice, and freedom in one of the most important demonstrations in American history. On this tour, you will follow the ground they walked and relive the meaning of that day in the city where it happened. You will learn the behind scen...
ما تشمله الجولة
٢ ساعات
مُقدم في الإنكليزية
إلغاء مجاني
بطاقة رقمية
٢ ساعات
مُقدم في الإنكليزية
إلغاء مجاني
بطاقة رقمية
ما تشمله الجولة
سماعات الرأس
نقاط التلاقي
الانطلاق
National Museum of African American History and Culture
We will meet in front of the National Museum of African American History and Culture Madison Dr. entrance at 6:45 pm
العودة
Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial
The tour will end at the Martin Luther King Memorial
برنامج الجولة
1
المتحف الوطني للتاريخ والثقافة الأمريكية الأفريقية
The March on Washington at NMAAHC: What the Museum Preserves and Why It Matters
The National Museum of African American History and Culture doesn’t house the March on Washington in a single room. Instead, the story is woven through several galleries — a deliberate choice that mirrors the march itself: a national effort built from many hands, many voices, and many movements converging on one day.
Across the museum, you’ll find objects, images, and documents that reveal how the march was organized, how it felt to be there, and how it reshaped the nation’s understanding of freedom.
٠ دقيقة
2
البيت الأبيض
From this spot, looking toward the White House, remember that the Kennedy brothers were deeply uneasy about the March on Washington. Inside those walls, they worried the march could erupt into chaos and damage their civil rights agenda.
So the administration stepped in — pushing organizers to shorten the program, control the route, and tone down speeches. They tried to manage the movement from a distance, afraid of what might unfold on the Mall.
But on August 28, the discipline and dignity of the march proved their fears wrong. The people delivered a peaceful demonstration the White House never quite trusted would happen.
٠ دقيقة
3
النصب التذكاري للحرب العالمية الثانية
Executive Order 8802 — The First Blow Against Jim Crow in Industry
At this stop, with the World War II Memorial around you, remember that the fight for democracy abroad forced a reckoning at home. In 1941, as the nation prepared for war, most defense factories still refused to hire Black workers for anything but the lowest‑paid jobs. Segregation was the rule, discrimination the norm.
A. Philip Randolph — the most influential Black labor leader of his era — threatened a massive March on Washington to expose this hypocrisy. The idea terrified the Roosevelt administration.
To stop the march, President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued Executive Order 8802, the first federal action to ban racial discrimination in the defense industry. It required war contractors to hire Black workers, opened doors to better‑paying jobs, and created the Fair Employment Practices Committee to enforce it.
It didn’t end racism in the workplace, but it cracked the wall. :
٠ دقيقة
4
نصب لنكولن التذكاري
On August 28, 1963, the Lincoln Memorial became the nation’s pulpit. A quarter‑million people filled the Mall, their eyes fixed on the steps where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. stood. When he moved beyond his prepared text and began to speak of a dream — a dream of justice and true American freedom — his words rolled across the Reflecting Pool like a rising tide.
For a moment, the memorial wasn’t just honoring Lincoln’s promise. It was demanding that the country finally keep it.
٠ دقيقة
5
النصب التذكاري لمارتن لوثر كينغ جونيور
As you approach the memorial, the first thing you notice is the Mountain of Despair — two massive granite boulders split apart, forming a narrow passageway. Walking through it feels intentional, symbolic. You’re literally moving through struggle, just as the memorial’s designers intended.
Beyond that opening, Dr. King emerges from the Stone of Hope, a 30‑foot‑tall sculpture carved from the same granite. He stands with his arms folded, gaze steady, posture unshakable — not triumphant, but resolute. It’s the look of a man who carried a nation’s moral weight and refused to set it down.
Around you, the memorial curves in a long, quiet crescent along the Tidal Basin. Etched into the granite walls are 14 quotations from King’s speeches and sermons — not the familiar lines everyone knows, but the deeper cuts: his words on justice, peace, dignity, and the fierce urgency of now. Each quote is placed so visitors can pause, reflect, and take in the landscape.