By the time we got to the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historic Park, everyone was ready for lunch. Technically, I suppose we were hungry before we even left the state capitol building (since the MLK area is only about a mile away). The first thing we did, then, was eat our picnic lunch.
Here's Benjamin, his mouth stuffed with sandwich, pretending to be Chewie (Cheese-bacca, if you will). If you can't tell, he's draped a package of string cheese across his chest.
Now, we were excited to finally get back to this historic park because we'd originally made plans to visit in January, having just returned from a quick trip to Selma and Montgomery, Alabama. We thought it would be a nice follow-up to our walk across the Edmund Pettis Bridge and our tour of the Alabama State Capitol.
But then, as I recall, we got sick. And then life just kept getting in the way and...we didn't make it downtown until today.
Nothing like out-of-town visitors to kick you into high gear! We were happy to share the experience with our wonderful aunts.
Benjamin, Zoë, and Alexander did the Junior Ranger program while we were there and earned their badges. I'm not sure how much they gleaned from the exhibits, however, because I'm afraid I wasn't great at leading them through the museum.
Here's the thing: the entire concept of the "Born to Lead" exhibits were simply not designed with me in mind. In 2019, I wrote that "in the big room they had these weird circle-cubicles with pictures and information to read and a video to watch, so they were interesting, but it really killed the flow of the room." This year I will add that it also was difficult for me to be in so small of a space, with a television screen blaring at me, while trying to read the captions on the walls, while trying to be mindful about traffic wanting to come into the little cubicle from the outside. It's just...not the ideal setup for me. And that's fine. Not everything needs to be the ideal setup for me. I can learn about MLK in other ways.
I will also add that the D.R.E.A.M. Gallery was much more to my liking (it's more open and I like that).
I will also add that Alexander wore the same jacket to the MLK sites in 2019 that Phoebe wore today. That makes sense because 2019 was (somehow) 4 years ago and Phoebe is 4 years younger than Alexander (so 4 years ago Alexander was only 2 years old). I'm not really clear on how this* happened...but the math checks out...so I'm going to have go with it.
*My children growing up right before my very eyes.
Phoebe was so jealous of the kids' junior ranger booklets and kept begging for her own "maff" to do. I didn't want to get an entire junior ranger booklet for her, though, so I just dug around in the diaper bag until I found a piece of paper for her to colour on (it's actually a junior ranger paper from Castillo de San Marcos that, yes, has apparently been in my diaper bag since May).
While we were waiting, I hollered across the street, "Should we walk down to his birth home?"
"Nah," said Andrew, looking down the street.
"It's literally right there," I said. "We drove all this way and the house is literally right there!"
"Meh," said Andrew, looking down the street.
"Your sisters haven't seen it and it's right there!"
Andrew then surprised us all by dashing across Boulevard (when we had been waiting for the light to change so we could cross Auburn to meet up with him), so we followed suit and quickly crossed Boulevard as well and then waited for Andrew and his crew to catch up with us (in front of the fire station #6, which I also wanted to go into, but evidently that was overruled).
From there it's about a one-minute walk to the King residence.
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