Walk Where They Walked
Martin Luther King III and Arndrea Waters King join PONANT EXPLORATIONS for an eight-day voyage along the Eastern Seaboard, tracing the many stories that made a nation.
Imagine standing in the very room where the Declaration of Independence was signed, or on the cobblestones where a revolution began. Or inside the church where freedom was quietly, defiantly kept alive. Now imagine experiencing this journey enhanced by truly unique insights from Martin Luther King III and Arndrea Waters King, two of the most compelling voices in America today.
This is the invitation extended by PONANT EXPLORATIONS’ commemorative voyage Celebrating America’s 250th: An Exploration of History and Culture. The eight-day sailing from Halifax to Baltimore aboard L’Austral includes 19 complimentary shore excursions to choose from that place you inside history rather than simply alongside it. Mr. and Mrs. King join the voyage as Guests of Honor, offering onboard talks and conversations that weave their family’s extraordinary legacy into the larger American story.
Along Boston’s cobblestone streets, the echoes of revolution still linger, marking the place where a nation’s path was forever changed.
The moment everything changed
Boston | 5 included shore excursion options
Picture Samuel Adams on the night of December 16, 1773. He has just delivered a speech at the Old South Meeting House that ended with a signal no one in the room could misconstrue. Within minutes, dozens of people were heading to the harbor. By morning, 342 chests of British tea would be at the bottom of Boston Harbor, and the American Revolution would be, for all practical purposes, underway.
Today, you can stand in that same meeting house, close your eyes, and imagine what it might have felt like to be there in that moment. Immersive shore experiences throughout the ‘cradle of liberty’ as Boston is often called, carry you through the birthplace of American independence, past Faneuil Hall and the Old North Church, to the very places where ordinary people decided to act.
Boston’s history runs deep. In Beacon Hill, the African Meeting House, the oldest surviving Black church in the nation, was where abolitionists organized, freedom seekers found shelter, and the Massachusetts 54th Regiment was recruited to fight. On another excursion option, you can explore Boston’s pivotal role in the women’s suffrage movement, learning of the determined activists who fought tirelessly for the vote and the influential voices who opposed them. This is a city where the full sweep of American history is written into the streets themselves.
These iconic mansions stand as symbols of grandeur, while the stories beyond their walls reveal a more complex chapter of American history.
The gilded surface and what lies beneath
Newport | 4 included shore excursion options
In the summer of 1895, Cornelius Vanderbilt II stood on the lawn of The Breakers, surveying seventy rooms and thirteen acres of Atlantic-facing grandeur. Elsewhere in Newport that same summer, descendants of enslaved Africans were building lives of their own, on the same streets, in the same harbor air.
That tension, between extraordinary privilege and the quiet determination of those who were never invited to the lawn, is woven into every cobblestone of this city. Newport rewards those willing to look at both sides of its story. You might walk the African American history tour, tracing a community that shaped Newport from its earliest days, including the soldiers of the 1st Rhode Island Regiment who fought for a country still deciding whether they were free. Or you might sail Narragansett Bay aboard an authentic 12 Meter America’s Cup yacht, heeling into the wind on a vessel built for glory. The deeper you look at Newport, the richer the story becomes.
A skyline that has welcomed dreamers for generations, where every arrival carries the promise of a new beginning.
A city that has always been a beginning
New York City | 6 included shore excursion options
She was seventeen years old, traveling alone from a village in southern Italy. When the harbor opened up and the Statue of Liberty appeared, she reportedly wept. She knew no English, had no money, and no idea what would come next. But she had a dream.
New York has always been the place where people arrive with nothing and build something extraordinary. At Ellis Island’s immigrant hospital complex, more than a million arrivals received care before stepping into their new lives, their stories now brought vividly to life by French artist JR’s haunting large-scale photographs. In the city’s Lower East Side, the Tenement Museum opens the door of a faithfully recreated immigrant apartment, a window into the daily lives of the families whose fortitude and perseverance left an indelible mark.
New York’s history reaches further back still. A Lenape-guided walk through Central Park’s North Woods introduces the original inhabitants of this land, whose connection to it long preceded the city that now surrounds it. In Greenwich Village, a Pride tour traces the movement that began at the Stonewall Inn, where a community refused to be invisible and changed the course of civil rights.
There are moments on this voyage that ask you to stop and bear witness. A guided visit to the September 11 Memorial and Museum, led by someone with firsthand memories of that day, is one of the most profound. Standing at the twin reflecting pools, reading the names, walking the museum’s galleries, you feel the weight of loss and the remarkable resilience of a city—and a country—that refused to be defined by it.
In Philadelphia, the promise of freedom was not only declared, but continually fought for.
The promise, and the people who kept demanding it
Philadelphia | 4 included shore excursion options
In 1794, Richard Allen purchased a plot of land in Philadelphia and broke ground on a church. He had purchased his own freedom years before. Now he was building something no one could take from him or his community: a place of worship, refuge, and resistance. When he rang the bell for the first service at Mother Bethel AME, he was doing more than opening a church. He was saying: we are here. We have always been here. And we will remain.
That church still stands, and you can walk inside it. Mother Bethel AME, the oldest African Methodist Episcopal congregation in the country, has anchored Philadelphia’s Black community through more than two centuries of struggle and progress. It is a quietly powerful place.
Just blocks away, Independence Hall and the Liberty Bell tell America’s founding story in full, including its contradictions. The Liberty Bell, so closely associated with the Revolution, was later adopted as a symbol by the abolitionist movement and then by the Civil Rights movement. In Philadelphia, the ideals of liberty and the fight to extend them to all people have always occupied the same streets.
Martin Luther King III and Arndrea Waters King, global humanitarians. (Photo Credit: Denis Reggie)
Guests of Honor: Martin Luther King III and Arndrea Waters King
“If we can live a day in peace, why can’t we live a week in peace? If we can live a week in peace, why not a month? And if we can achieve a year, why not a lifetime?” -Martin Luther King III
During the voyage, Martin Luther King III and Arndrea Waters King offer a uniquely personal lens through which to experience this journey, through onboard talks and discussions rooted in their own powerful legacy. Their Realize the Dream Initiative, working toward 100 million service hours by Dr. King’s 100th birthday in 2029, is proof that history’s most powerful chapters are written in the present tense.
Through the striking perspectives and remarkable stories shared by Mr. and Mrs. King, woven together with knowledgeable local guides ashore, America’s 250th anniversary becomes far more than a commemoration, it becomes a living conversation. And you are invited.
Contact your travel advisor, visit us.ponant.com, or call 1-888-400-1082 to reserve your place on this commemorative voyage.
Celebrating a Quarter Millenium of Independence
Commemorate this historic event with PONANT on a specially celebration cruise with Martin Luther King III and Anrdrea Waters King, global humantarians.



