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Highlights of the Deep South

This two-week road trip takes you through five Southern states and more than a thousand miles of music, history and culture, tracing a route that captures the depth and variety of the Deep South.

This is a journey for those who want to see as much of the Deep South in two weeks as possible: Alabama’s Civil Rights landmarks, Louisiana’s coastal culture, Mississippi’s blues heartlands, and Tennessee’s famous music cities. Some stops give you time to settle in, others keep you moving so you can experience more of the region’s texture and variety. The drives are comfortable, the sequence is thoughtful, and every stop contributes something meaningful. It is a richly layered adventure through the places that shaped the American South.

Self-drive
14 nights

From £3,295 including international flights. Please note guide prices are not necessarily based on the featured hotels below.

Itinerary overview

Day 1

Arrive in Atlanta and stay the night before the journey south. You could easily spend longer here...

Days 2-3

The time difference means you might find yourself rising early with enough time to explore the ci...

Day 4

Leave Montgomery and make a short run southwest to Monroeville, a small town with a big literary ...

Days 5-7

Leave Mobile in the morning and follow the Gulf Coast for about ninety minutes to Bay Saint Louis...

Day 8

Collect a new hire car and head west into Cajun and Creole country, where Louisiana culture feels...

Day 9

Continue north for around two and a half hours into Mississippi and choose your overnight base. N...

Day 10

Head north into the Mississippi Delta for your overnight stop in the landscape that shaped the bl...

Days 11-12

Arrive in Memphis for two nights in a city where soul, blues, and rock and roll converge. A Grace...

Days 13-14

Leave Memphis for the 200-mile journey to Nashville or turn it into a full day by looping through...

Extend your holiday

If you want to end on a different note, fly from Nashville to New York for three nights. Harlem’s...

Day 1

Atlanta

Arrive in Atlanta and stay the night before the journey south. You could easily spend longer here if you want, with major attractions like the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historical Park and the World of Coca-Cola close to hand, but this itinerary is designed to maximise your time in the Deep South, with Atlanta serving as your gateway.

Days 2-3

Montgomery

The time difference means you might find yourself rising early with enough time to explore the city a little before you collect your car and set out on the three-hour drive to Montgomery. The route takes you through Tuskegee, where the Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site offers a powerful introduction to the pioneering Second World War pilots who trained there. Two nights in Montgomery give you time to explore its major Civil Rights landmarks at a steady pace. Museums, memorials, and historic sites are thoughtfully presented and create a clear sense of place, past and progress.

Day 4

Mobile and the Gulf Shores

Leave Montgomery and make a short run southwest to Monroeville, a small town with a big literary legacy as the hometown of Harper Lee and the childhood home of Truman Capote. From here, the road turns northwest to Selma, where the Edmund Pettus Bridge stands as one of the most important sites on the Civil Rights Trail and offers essential context before you turn south again. The final stretch takes you toward Mobile and the Gulf Shores, roughly a two-hour drive, where coastal breezes, colourful streets and wide-open beaches mark a welcome change of scene after a day rooted in stories that shaped America.

Days 5-7

New Orleans

Leave Mobile in the morning and follow the Gulf Coast for about ninety minutes to Bay Saint Louis, a relaxed little town with indie shops, local art, and a harbourfront that makes an easy midway stretch. From here it’s another couple of hours into New Orleans, where you can drop off your hire car (you won’t need it during your time in the city) and settle in for three nights. An included French Quarter Walking Tour gives you a great introduction to the city’s stories and hidden corners, and after that, you’re free to explore however you like. Drift between jazz bars, wander through courtyards, and dive into the food scene at your own pace. If you want to add more structure, optional experiences such as a jazz-themed walking tour, a visit to Oak Alley Plantation, or a daytime or evening cruise on the Mississippi help you tailor your stay.

French Quarter walking tour
New Orleans

Take a walking tour through the beautiful French Quarter, one of America’s oldest and most unique neighbourhoods. Your local expert will guide you through, following in the footsteps of historic figures and taking in the Mighty Mississippi, the French Market and Jackson Square. Founded in 1718 by French explorer Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, Sieur de Bienville, you’ll learn all about the city’s Creole heritage, its architecture, courtyards, gardens, food, music, and art.

Oak Alley Plantation Tour
New Orleans

Swap the vibrant city streets of New Orleans for the rugged rural scapes of The Old South on this fascinating journey to the Oak Alley Plantation. Prepare to be blown away by the exquisite architecture of the plantation as you navigate the quarter-mile long driveway before finally locking eyes on its prestigious pillared facade.

Concealed entirely by 250-year-old oak trees, it’s hard to believe that this idyllic oasis has such a heinous history. A must-do for history buffs and otherwise, this immersive experience takes you back in time to when its privileged inhabitants owned and enslaved African men, women and children.

• Duration: 4 hours
• Daily departures
• Operates year-round
• Group experience

Good to know
There are two times available for this tour - choose between 10am to 3.15pm or midday to 5.15pm. Lunch and refreshments are not included. Please bring ID with you.

Daytime Jazz Cruise
New Orleans

Sail along the city’s sparkling waters and take a deep dive into a mesmerising melting pot of sights and sounds on this breathtaking steamboat experience. Spectate the historical regions that surround the legendary Mississippi River and harness the opportunity to kick back and relax in undisputed style.

Cruise from the lively heart of the French Quarter and step back in time to the land of the age-old New Orleans’ ‘cottonocracy.’ All this is rounded off with a good old foot tap to the syncopated rhythms of the on-board jazz band.

• Duration: two hours (11.30am to 1.30pm or 2.30pm to 4.30pm)
• Daily departures
• Operates year-round
• Group experience

Good to know
Lunch is not included but can be purchased at an extra cost. Please bring ID with you.

Evening Jazz Cruise
New Orleans

There's no better place or time to contemplate the New Orleans' skyline than from aboard a good old-fashioned steamboat. And if the breathtaking views of the city's skyline aren't enough to satisfy your senses, you have the option to book the cruise with a casual buffet-style dinner.

Don't think the highlights of this trip are limited to the awe-inspiring vantage point or the delicious meal. Aboard the Natchez Steamboat, you're also invited to have a nosey around the ship's engine room. Inside this quaint space, redesigned to look like a museum, you'll find all sorts of historical artefacts that have many an interesting story behind them. Throughout the voyage, you can enjoy a jiggle to live jazz tunes performed by the world-renowned Dukes of Dixieland. New Orleans is famous for being the city of jazz, so the Dukes' jingles provide the playlist.

Day 8

Baton Rouge

Collect a new hire car and head west into Cajun and Creole country, where Louisiana culture feels distinct, proud, and rooted in food, music, and river life. You can stay overnight in Baton Rouge or continue to Lafayette if you want a deeper dip into the region’s lively food and festival scene. Expect colourful neighbourhoods, historic riverfronts, and landscapes shaped by bayous and sugarcane fields. It is a natural shift from the pace of New Orleans and sets you up nicely for the journey north.

Day 9

Natchez or Vicksburg

Continue north for around two and a half hours into Mississippi and choose your overnight base. Natchez offers wide Mississippi River views, grand historic homes and a slower, more reflective pace. Vicksburg brings a compact riverside layout with significant Civil War heritage and a stronger sense of military history. Either choice creates a gentle interlude before the musical heartlands that follow.

Day 10

Mississippi Delta

Head north into the Mississippi Delta for your overnight stop in the landscape that shaped the blues. This rural region carries an enormous musical legacy, marked by Blues Trail sites, small museums, and towns that influenced some of the earliest and most important artists. Clarksdale is home to the Delta Blues Museum and the crossroads made famous by the Robert Johnson legend. Cleveland offers the modern Grammy Museum, and Indianola adds the BB King Museum, which honours the man who carried Delta blues onto the world stage. Dockery Plantation, not far from Cleveland, is considered one of the key places where the blues first took form.

Days 11-12

Memphis

Arrive in Memphis for two nights in a city where soul, blues, and rock and roll converge. A Graceland Elvis Experience VIP Tour is included, giving you access to Elvis Presley’s world, from his home and cars to the personal stories behind the music. Explore the rest of the city at your own pace: walk Beale Street’s neon stretch of blues clubs, visit Sun Studio where rock and roll took shape, and spend time at the National Civil Rights Museum at the Lorraine Motel.

Graceland Elvis Experience Tour
Nashville & Memphis

Walk through Graceland as if you belong there. This tour lets you follow in Elvis’s own blue-suede footsteps, with an audio guide featuring stories and commentary from Elvis himself and his daughter, Lisa Marie. You’ll see the rooms where he lived, laughed, worked, and unwound, from the living room and music room to the TV room, pool room, and the famously untamed Jungle Room (no lions, plenty of legend).

Explore more of the 14-acre estate, then take a quiet moment in the Meditation Garden, where Elvis now rests with members of his family. Step aboard Elvis’s custom jet, then wrap things up at Elvis Presley’s Memphis Entertainment Complex, where the story keeps rolling. This sprawling mix of museums and exhibits invites you deeper into Elvis’s world, from dazzling jumpsuits and gold records to his beloved cars and memorabilia, with spots to eat, browse, and linger. Thank you very much.

• Daily departures 
• Operates year round
• Group experience

Days 13-14

Nashville

Leave Memphis for the 200-mile journey to Nashville or turn it into a full day by looping through Tupelo or Muscle Shoals. The Tupelo detour lets you visit Elvis Presley’s birthplace and the hardware store where he bought his first guitar. Muscle Shoals offers legendary studios like FAME and Muscle Shoals Sound Studio, where artists such as Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett, and The Rolling Stones recorded era-defining tracks. Arrive in Nashville and make the most of your included Fun Nashville Attraction Pass, covering major highlights like the Country Music Hall of Fame, the Johnny Cash Museum, and city sightseeing tours. With two nights here, you can roam between honky tonks, explore intimate listening rooms, and finish the trip wrapped in the creative energy that defines Music City.

Fun Nashville Attraction Pass
Nashville & Memphis

Think of this as your backstage pass to Nashville. The Attraction Pass lets you line up some of the city’s greatest hits in advance, saving money and leaving you free to enjoy the show. There’s no rush either. The attractions don’t have to be done in a single day, so you can set your own tempo.

Start things off at Ole Smoky Moonshine Distillery, where you can sample moonshine, cocktails, and local beer by the glass, fuel up on crowd favourites like White Duck Taco and Prince’s Hot Chicken, and take home a jar or two for later. Nashville believes in souvenirs you can sip. Step into the spotlight at Madame Tussauds Nashville, an interactive celebration of American music where legends past and present are always ready for a photo op. Then head to the Country Music Hall of Fame, where the story of country music unfolds through iconic instruments, costumes, and moments that shaped two centuries of sound. Go deeper behind the music with a visit to historic RCA Studio B, once home to recording greats like Elvis Presley, Chet Atkins, Eddy Arnold, and the Everly Brothers. Prefer ink to vinyl? Opt instead for Hatch Show Print, the legendary letterpress poster shop that has been hand-printing Nashville’s look for generations. To tie it all together, hop aboard the Old Town Trolley for a one-day hop-on, hop-off tour that lets you see the city at street level, with stories included and walking optional. Finish on a high note at either the Johnny Cash Museum, home to the most comprehensive collection of artefacts from the Man in Black’s life, or the Patsy Cline Museum, a heartfelt tribute to one of country music’s most unforgettable voices.

Nashville Old Town Trolley Hop-on Hop-off Day Tour
Nashville & Memphis

Famed for its thriving music scene, this hop-on, hop-off day tour around Nashville Old Town welcomes you to traverse a buzzing network of entertainment venues, eateries and unique speciality shops all in one action-packed day trip.

For the avid theatregoers and music enthusiasts, Opryland, The Ryman Auditorium and Tootsie's Orchid Lounge serve great spots in which to watch a show, while the Country Music Hall of Fame and Bicentennial Mall State Park lend a glimpse into Music City’s rich history. Hop on and off the Old Town Trolley at your leisure and delight in all that this energetic hub has to offer!

• Duration: Full day
• Daily departures
• Operates year-round
• Group experience

Good to know
Bus departures run every 30 minutes. Refreshments are not included but can be purchased on the day at the various different stops.

Extend your holiday

New York

If you want to end on a different note, fly from Nashville to New York for three nights. Harlem’s jazz clubs reflect the Great Migration, when Southern musicians carried blues and gospel north and reshaped the city’s sound. New York’s civil rights history, including figures such as Malcolm X and the NAACP's work, adds another layer to the themes you have explored. Literary landmarks tied to writers such as James Baldwin and Zora Neale Hurston connect to Southern voices that helped define American culture. With skyline views, Central Park, and distinctive neighbourhoods, New York offers a bright and fitting finale that links the Southern story to the wider American one.

Big yellow taxi in NYC
Big yellow taxi in NYC
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