4 to 5 hours (approx.)
Daily Tour
4 people
English
Explore the Tennessee and Alabama stretches of the Natchez Trace Parkway with this self-guided driving tour. Traverse the historical route of this unique national park, a 444-mile journey from Natchez, Mississippi, to Nashville, Tennessee. Discover natural, cultural, and historic sites, experiencing a journey free from commercial interruption. Drive in either direction and immerse yourself in the untouched beauty and rich stories of the American South. Purchase one tour per car, not per person. Everyone listens together! After booking, check your email to download the separate Audio Tour Guide App by Action, enter your unique password, and access your tour. These steps require good internet/Wi-Fi access. From there, follow the audio instructions and the route. New, extra validity ‘ now yours for an entire year! Use multiple times over multiple trips! This isn't an entrance ticket. Check opening hours before your visit.
I’m going to guess that we’ve heard of Frank Lloyd Wright who is recognized as being one of the country’s greatest architects
20 minutes • Admission Ticket Not Included
While many people tend to associate complex, ancient societies with the Egyptian pyramids and Mexico’s Mayan temples, there were thriving cultures from that era right here, too.
20 minutes • Admission Ticket Free
People in Muscle Shoals like to say that music is in the water there. The area was the birthplace of W. C. Handy, known as “The Father of the Blues.” His home is one of the area’s attractions. Sun Studio and Sun Records owner Sam Phillips, also known as “The Father of Rock and Roll,” was born in Florence, just across the river.
15 minutes • Admission Ticket Free
There’s a gem of a spring up ahead and it’s well worth seeing. It’s along the Rock Spring Nature Trail. We can do a short half-mile loop walking trail to a bubbling spring.
10 minutes • Admission Ticket Free
To see their camping site, which by all admissions doesn’t comprise much more than a small sign at the historical marker, turn left off the parkway at county road 14 after this small bridge. Otherwise, let’s continue driving.
10 minutes • Admission Ticket Free
The late Tom Hendrix spent more than 30 years building what has become the largest unmortared wall in the country. The mile-long wall is a monument to Hendrix’s great-great grandmother, Te-lah-nay, and her journey on the Trail of Tears.
10 minutes • Admission Ticket Free
The Florence Mound and hundreds of others across the Southeast were part of cultural centers where people lived, traded across vast networks and buried their dead. The Florence Mound measures 145 feet by 95 feet near its top.
10 minutes • Admission Ticket Free
When I’m traveling on the Trace I tend to get in the zone. I get lured into a meditative state, looking at the landscape, watching the road, and pulling over to immerse myself in stories of the past. Because I don’t pass billboards or other reminders of the outside world, not much breaks me out of what I call my Trace trance.
10 minutes • Admission Ticket Free
I think this is the first time I’m mentioning fishing on the Trace. Is that our kind of thing? Did you pack rods and reels? If so, we can side trip three miles east to Laurel Hill Lake. This state-managed lake is one of several in Tennessee specifically designed for anglers.
10 minutes • Admission Ticket Free
The Meriwether Lewis Campground, one of just three campgrounds on the Parkway itself—the other two are Rocky Springs and Jeff Busby —and the only one in Tennessee. The good news is, there are no fees to camp here.
15 minutes • Admission Ticket Free
The first parking area we’ll see will be on our right and it’s for Fall Hollow – a small waterfall. We barely have to take 10 steps from our car to see it. Jackson Falls coming up later is more impressive, but Fall Hollow is still worth a quick stop.
10 minutes • Admission Ticket Free
Technically, Devil’s Backbone State Natural Area is a park adjacent to the Trace, not actually on it. But, hey that’s just a detail. What’s important is that it’s a good place to take a pretty, moderate-effort hike through the woods without a lot of other people around. It’s especially interesting for the diversity of plant life.
10 minutes • Admission Ticket Free
I want to tell you about Jackson Falls now so we have some time to think about if we want to make the stop to see it. Before we get to it, we will pass She Boss Place, have an option to stop and see a tobacco farm and do an Old Trace Walk. Following that are beautiful views from Bakers Bluff.
10 minutes • Admission Ticket Free
From here we get a roughly 180 degree view across the Water Valley. Its a example of pastoral Tennessee as we look across rolling hills of farms and ponds. The view is normally well maintained here, rarely obscured by brush or other growth. Interestingly, its a popular dark location for stargazing or there is some astronomical event taking place – like a meteor shower.
10 minutes • Admission Ticket Free
I’ve mentioned President Andrew Jackson a few times. Jackson is one of the country’s most polarizing historical figures, at least in the South.
15 minutes • Admission Ticket Not Included
In the early 19th century the forest here gave way to an army post, hence the name, a place where the U.S. military stationed troops to guard against Native Americans who were defending their ancestral land.
20 minutes • Admission Ticket Free
If you haven’t spent a lot of time in Nashville, you probably think it’s home to a lot of country music musicians. But there are some really big celebrities that choose to live in a bucolic, tiny town, called Leiper’s fork.
10 minutes • Admission Ticket Free
Nashville is known as Music City and with very good reason. With more than 180 music venues, Nashville offers us the opportunity to see live music every night of our stay, including at the small but iconic Bluebird Cafe.
10 minutes • Admission Ticket Free
There is no stopping on the bridge itself, so let’s keep going. If we would now like to catch that second view from up above, we should turn into the first pullout that we will see on our left side once we touch back down onto land again.
10 minutes • Admission Ticket Free
If all this sightseeing has made us hungry, we’ve got something of a Nashville culinary icon ahead. Just east of where the Trace ends and meets highway 100 sits the legendary Loveless Cafe. It’s been a mainstay for Trace travelers for more than 70 years- ever since Anne and Lon Loveless opened their restaurant in 1951.
20 minutes • Admission Ticket Free