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Seahawks Travel To Atlanta And Alabama For A Civil Rights Learning Tour

Seahawks employees, along with three local educators, took a trip to the South for a learning tour hosted by the Institute for Common Power.

Seattle Seahawks Our Journey Forward Truth And Purpose

Seahawks employees and three educators took a learning tour, called the Truth and Purpose tour, led by the Institute for Common Power, to both Atlanta and different parts of Alabama with the Institute for Common Power, a local organization, whose focus is on education to action.

This trip, which was taken earlier this year, in April, was the fourth tour Seahawks employees have taken, with a new group attending every time. Karen Wilkins-Mickey, vice president of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion for the Seahawks is one of the reasons behind the Seahawks going on this tour every year and she has gone on every tour so far.

"I am at this point where I can't imagine not going," Wilkins-Mickey said. "Every year I learn something new. Of course they add different experiences everything we go, so it really does feel different every time, but I want to learn. I want to continue to learn. This is our culture, it's our history and I would like to continue to understand why we are where we are today. And I think the only way to do that is to understand our past. Every time I go, I just feel so inspired. It gives me purpose to do the work that I do."

The trip starts with a flight from Seattle to Atlanta where the group has their first glimpse of what to expect for the rest of their week. The group was given a tour of an area of downtown Atlanta called "Sweet Auburn Ave." which was once a booming community and neighborhood, filled with businesses, that was systemically dismantled by a highway that was built through the neighborhood. Businesses and families were forced to leave.

Keenan Allen Ladd, one of three educators on the tour said, "I really just appreciated the educators in those moments, because they take you through the whole story of the major moments that happened in the Civil Rights Movement."

The rest of that first day was spent at the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historical Park, his birth home and other sites in Atlanta before making the drive to the neighboring state of Alabama to visit Anniston, where the Freedom Riders boarded a bus at the Greyhound station and which was attacked by a group of white supremacist,

The group spent the remainder of their trip in different cities in Alabama, including Birmingham, Montgomery and Selma.

While in Montgomery, the group visited the Montgomery riverfront, a location where enslaved people were brought off of boats and taken to the city's downtown area to be auctioned off.

Leann Coates, Seahawks premium service representative, described the experience as shocking.

"It's very powerful to be standing there at the riverfront, and know that not long ago, people were brought on ships and sold. That street is still called commerce street. Things have not changed in the way you think they have changed."

While the group was in Montgomery, one of the locations they visited was the Legacy Museum, a museum that immerses visitors in the history of Black Americans from the Transatlantic slave trade all the way through to present day and mass incarceration.

And while the actual tour of the South was just five days, the journey doesn't stop there. Ladd said he immediately returned to his classroom and thought about ways to get his students involved and educated on the topics he learned about on the tour. Allen Ladd said he utilized the one thing he knows all of his students use, social media, specifically Tik Tok and Instagram reels, to help the students learn information in a natural way.

"When I got back, I actually had them all take out their phones and go on Tik Tok and look up the Institute for Common Power, just so they could see that experience first-hand. We did that for like two days. By the third day, a lot of their algorithm's changes and they were able to get real life information that they weren't getting before."

He added, "This tour furthers my want, urge and that yearning to make sure I'm standing up for everyone who doesn't have the opportunity to utilize their voice, to just amplify voices. There's a lot of people that we've learned on this trip, this Truth and Purpose, to utilize your voice for the voice of others. And that's something that I'm going to do… I'm in a unique position as an educator. I have the opportunity to guide or facilitate youth, and I have an opportunity to open the eyes of our youth and I have something that is precious… I want to make sure they have the correct information. I don't want to steer them in a particular direction, but I definitely want to put the correct information in front of them, so they can understand what this country looked like previously, to give them a vision of what they believe this country should look like moving forward in the future."

A lot of the participants come away from the trip feeling a sense of community, empowered and are more enlightened about the history of Black Americans than they were before.

Seahawks rookies and staff volunteered at five locations as part of the annual teammate day of service on June 12, 2026.

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