Day 6
WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS – MOUNT AIRY – WINSTON-SALEM
WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS: Scenic drive into North Carolina en-route to Mount Airy.
MOUNT AIRY: Enjoy free time before a guided walking tour of the “friendly city” of Mount Airy, real-life hometown of actor Andy Griffith and the inspiration for the fictional town of Mayberry, featured in The Andy Griffith Show. You can almost picture Andy, Opie, and Aunt Bee strolling along these charming streets!
WINSTON-SALEM: YourChoice Excursions include one of the following activities of your choice:
TASTE: Crafty Brews
Drink in the history of the Winston-Salem craft beer scene on a guided walking tour visiting two breweries, including Foothills Brewing—the area’s oldest craft brewery.
GAZE: Galleries of Great American Masters
Enjoy a docent-led tour to of Reynolda House Museum of American Art. Discover the masterpieces by American artists as you explore the 1917 mansion and restored former home of Katherine and R.J. Reynolds (founder of the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company). Today, the Reynolda House is home to the works of American masters, Georgia O’Keeffe, Albert Bierstadt, Grant Wood, and Jacob Lawrence, to name a few.
DELVE: Old Salem’s Younger Days
Explore the rich, authentic, and diverse cultural history of the early South with a visit to Old Salem Museums & Gardens—home to one of America’s most comprehensive historical collections. –Learn about Winston-Salem’s early settlers with a look at the Moravians of North Carolina, as well as the enslaved and free African Americans, and the Native peoples of the Southern Woodland. Peruse fascinating artifacts that bring to life the culture and architecture of Old Salem’s earliest days. Your adventure begins at the Old Salem Visitor centre with an overview of Moravian history before time to explore the village. Interact with costumed actors who demonstrate Old Salem’s early days of tinsmiths, blacksmiths, gunsmiths, bakers, and carpenters practicing their trades. You’ll also visit the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts (MESDA), showcasing the finest architecture, furniture, ceramics, metalwork, needlework, painting, prints, and other decorative arts made and used by the early settlers of the American South.
Free time this evening.