Ford's Theatre, where President Abraham Lincoln was fatally shot, undergoes renovation in Washington Thursday, Dec. 11, 2008. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
1/1

The Peterson House across the street, where Lincoln died, remains open for tours. "It's one of the most sacred spots in all of Washington," said Ford's Theatre Director Paul Tetreault. "That is the real deal."

CIVIL RIGHTS: Visitors can "walk in the footsteps of Abraham Lincoln, Frederick Douglass, Martin Luther King Jr." and others who fought for equality along the Civil War to Civil Rights heritage trail that winds through downtown Washington. Stops along the way include the alley where John Wilkes Booth fled after shooting Lincoln and the hotel where King finished his "I Have a Dream" speech. Details at http://www.culturaltourismdc.org.

Powerful images from the civil rights movement will be on display in the exhibit, "Road to Freedom," through March 9 at the Smithsonian's Ripley Center International Gallery. Nearly 200 images are on display from about 50 photographers who documented the 12 years between the time Rosa Parks refused to give up her bus seat to a white man in 1955 to King's assassination in 1968. The gallery is located underground on the National Mall with an entrance near the Smithsonian Castle; http://nmaahc.si.edu.

Later in 2009, on Easter Sunday, the National Park Service will recreate Marian Anderson's landmark concert on those steps of the Lincoln Memorial, where she sang in 1939 after a nearby concert hall turned her away because she was black.

INAUGURAL BALLS: For visitors who can't wait to attend their first inaugural ball, there will be a plethora of options during the inaugural weekend. Peace activists can gather at the "Inaugural Peace Ball," which will be hosted at the Smithsonian Postal Museum. Alumni and others connected to historically black colleges and universities will hold their own ball on the Washington Harbor. Tickets sell for $300. MTV will televise its own ball from the Ronald Reagan Building on Pennsylvania Avenue. And the Smithsonian American Art Museum will be the site of the Lincoln 2.0 Inaugural Ball. In 1865, the building also played host to President Lincoln's inaugural ball. Victorian-era attire is welcomed. Tickets are going for $375 to $500, proving that for this year, history still sells.