Parade Grounds
Every Memorial Day, in my hometown of Farmingdale, New York, the whole community turned out for a parade on Main Street. When I think about it now, the idea of a parade seems as absurd as a fashion show — an event where people gather to watch other people walk. But when I was a kid, it was a highlight of my year. My family would get there early to get good seats (a “seat,” in this context, referring to a place to sit uncomfortably on the curb) and wait impatiently for something to happen. Eventually a police car would roll slowly down the street with its lights flashing, and the crowd would let out a cheer.
Trailing the police car would be a succession of applause-inducing sights: proud police and military veterans marching smartly in step, Girl and Boy Scout troops who hadn’t yet learned to march in step, troopers on horseback, freshly waxed fire trucks, and local politicians waving from the back seats of balloon-covered convertibles. All of these were punctuated by marching bands from local schools, led by confident-looking girls twirling flags or batons. (For some reason, the bands always seemed to play anywhere other than where I was sitting. As soon as they reached my field of view, they lapsed into marking time with snare drums — but even the snap of the snares was thrilling.) Most of the kids in the audience, and many of the adults as well, waved miniature American flags on wooden sticks — this being a time when such a thing could be done without irony by people of all political persuasions.
I remember only one year when I had less-than-total interest in the parade. The local news — conveyed to me only through adults’ gossip — was that one of the stores on Main Street had recently been robbed. For me, that news held a sort of dangerous excitement: A robbery — like the ones I would see all the time on the Superman TV show — but for real, right here in Farmingdale! While the parade filed by, I visually combed the street, trying to figure out which of the stores had been the victim. I don’t know what gave me the idea that I’d be able to identify a robbed store simply by its appearance, but there had to be something different about it, didn’t there?
Finally, in the distance, I spotted a store — well, actually, a bar. It looked pretty normal, except that at the top of the storefront were large, white, three-dimensional letters that spelled “ROB ROY.” I found the orthography questionable, but it occurred to me that if I were a traumatized store owner, I too might pay less-than-perfect attention to the spelling of “ROBBERY.” The rest was mysterious, though: At what point had the store owner put up those letters? During the robbery, to summon the police; or after the robbery, to let the rest of the community know? And how did the bar happen to have those particular huge sign letters on hand? Did they have a whole alphabet stored in the basement? Did every store have them, just in case? I regret to tell you, anticlimactically, that I never found out the answers to those questions.
The ideal parade — the one I would have given anything to see in person — was the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. Our Farmingdale parades were fine, but they didn’t have elaborate floats, giant balloons, and celebrities like that parade I saw on TV. New York City was just an hour-long train ride away, and I begged my parents every Thanksgiving to take me there. They always responded that it would be too hectic, too difficult, and not worth making the trip.
Finally, one year, my wearied father beckoned me to the car and told me we were going to see the Macy’s parade. Confusingly, the place he drove to was not the train station, but a shopping-center parking lot in some unknown part of Long Island. Adjoining the parking lot was an empty, narrow road lined with a few straggling spectators. I was perplexed.
“This can’t be right,” I said. “The Macy’s parade is in New York.”
“After they finish marching in the city, they come here,” he said.
“All of it? The balloons and everything?”
My father nodded. I wanted to believe him, but it seemed impossible.
“The road is so narrow,” I said. “They’d never be able to fit the parade here.”
He told me to be patient. Finally, a parade did come. Needless to say, it was not the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade; it was some local parade, complete with the usual fire trucks and high school marching bands.
I have no idea what my father was thinking. Was he confused, and really did believe that this was an additional stop for the Macy’s parade? Did he know it wasn’t, but think I’d be fooled? Was he just trying to get me out of the house for a while, to give my mother some peace?
Whatever his intention was, it worked. I never again begged to be taken to the Macy’s parade. In later years, my father claimed not to remember the incident. So unlike the letters over the Farmingdale bar, which eventually made sense to me as an adult, the details of this episode remain mysterious. I still would like to see the Macy’s parade someday.
I guess I don’t get the whole parade thing. I’m pretty sure I saw the Macy’s parade in person once, but obviously it didn’t make much of an impression. I have a niece who danced in it a couple of times – I was an adult and my own kids were little – we always watched on TV those years. At least I could make myself comfortable and go to the kitchen whenever I wanted. I saw SF Carnaval in person one year, from the VIP section for some reason I no longer recall. It was… A lot of people, a lot of noise, a lot of feathers, a lot of skin. I failed to catch the spirit. I wonder what makes some people love parades, and others not? Might it be that I grew up in Manhattan, where crowds of people standing on the sidewalk are just a part of every day life that you try to avoid?
You’re telling me that there are people who don’t love parades? Sure, the crowd on the sidewalk is no fun, but where else do you get to see marching bands, and people twirling batons, and Dalmatians riding on fire trucks? I used to envy kids who grew up in Manhattan, but I can see how it might leave you jaded by the time you’re 8. I guess one advantage of growing up in a small suburb is that even a local parade can still feel exciting.
I never saw a parade growing up in San José, only the televised parades, beginning in the earlier black-and-white TV days. While living in Redwood City, I saw a parade three times, once on a date with my fiancée and once with my wife and our older son at age three. The first time, I was able to enter the old, original fire station (now the main library) and watch from the second floor for a while, thanks to a friend and his fireman father, who gave us a tour of their living quarters and fire poles. The second and third times, we stood amid the throng of onlookers and repositioned ourselves along the parade route for a better view. I wouldn’t mind going a fourth time, although the sun tends to bake people at that time of year. However, part of the downside for me, personally, was the conspicuous absence of anything smacking of our founding origins, not one, whether a Washington stand-in or militia men. There may have been something suggestive of the Civil War, but my faded memory doesn’t serve me now. On the other hand, there were veterans of various ages on floats and in trucks. What did it have? There were Shriners wearing a fez and uniform. Okay, good for the Shriners Hospital. There were fire engines and vintage automobiles, some carrying the local politicians, veterans, and such. The parade was both colorful and dull at the same time. My poor son had to locate and duck into a porta-potty, which nauseated him. A parade is what you bring to the experience and what you want it to be. I remember that even the Apollo missions on TV became old hat after just a few.
My dad has a Model T and I’ve found being IN a parade more fun than watching it.
As a kid, I used to wake up early on Thanksgiving morning to watch the Macy’s Day Parade. When my kids were little I thought I’d recapture some of that fun. What I discovered, to my great sadness, was that it had become completely overrun with corporate sponsorships.
I can’t make sense of your father’s choice either. If he made a mistake, why not confess in the moment? If it was to fool you, I would think that would make it memorable to him. Do you recall if you said to him at the time that you knew it wasn’t the Macy’s Parade? And if you didn’t, do you have a sense of why you didn’t? I’m sure you had plenty of evidence to prove your point.