Travels & Tours

Heritage Liberia advances travel and tourism by showcasing cultural heritage, delivering guided tour experiences, and supporting sustainable national development.

Historical Tours

Our historical tours link Liberia’s rich history with the magnificent greenery of the countryside, excitement, and fun. Experience Liberia’s hospitality and cuisine. Tours are designed for students of all levels and ages, visitors, and Liberians.

Pepper Bird Tour
The Heritage Liberia Pepper Bird Tour showcases historical sites around Monrovia, commencing from Fort Norris, Monrovia’s highest peak, through the old city, highlighting the famous Providence Island and Baptist Church, where Liberia’s Declaration of Independence was proclaimed over 170 years ago, and the first buildings of the legislature, judiciary, and home of the first president.

Farmington River Tour

The Farmington River Tour takes visitors on a tour of the world’s largest rubber plantation and tells the history of Firestone and Liberia. It delves into agreements signed over a hundred years ago that shape the destiny of Liberia today.

Students and tourists will explore natural rubber production and uses, visit sites created to experiment with the interracial accommodation of American troops on Liberian soil, and understand untold historical ties between the U.S.A. and Liberia. This tour takes visitors 20 miles out of Monrovia.

Bopolu Tour

Bopolu is a historic Liberian city which dates to the 1800s, when there were tribal wars between
slave traders, Liberians, and the settlers. It is home to the grave sites of the most famous kings.
Sao Boso Kamara (1836) and Momolu Sarh (1871).
It has the oldest Islamic academy in Liberia, Bopolu, Medina. Tourists can learn early Liberian tribal history, relations to the Transatlantic Slave Trade, and visit the Sapema Waterfalls.

Fort Norris Tour

Situated atop Ducor Hill in Monrovia, Liberia, Fort Norris, also called Coastal Battery Fort Norris, is a historic defense installation. Located at the highest point in Monrovia, it is acknowledged as the nation's first defensive facility.
The Dutch constructed the first rock-walled fort in the 18th century or earlier (stories range from the 1700s to 1831).
The location was refurbished by the U.S. Navy in the early 1800s, and it was originally called Fort Stockton in honor of Commodore Robert F. Stockton, who played a key role in the foundation of Liberia.

For more tours, please contact the number below:
+231 (886) 424 728