A Look Back
Jerry Person
Well, our great Fourth of July parade is now part of history.
The other day a friend of mine, Craig Woods, and I were at the
Huntington Beach Civic Center on business and ran into Chris Cole. Cole
is one of those unsung heroes who spent many hours in the media
department putting the finishing touches together for our parade.
He told us that he watched some taped footage of the parade when it
turned onto Main Street from Pacific Coast Highway. He said that he had
never seen a more beautiful backdrop with the blue Pacific, Pier Plaza
and the Huntington Beach Pier together and wished that same scene could
have been seen across the nation.
This got me to thinking of the time when our parade was first seen
from the Pacific to the Atlantic shores.
The year was 1976 and America was celebrating its bicentennial with
great fanfare, and what better way to celebrate than by watching the
oldest Fourth of July parade west of the Mississippi.
And watch it they did.
From coast to coast people watched it on NBC.
What had once only been seen by locals from their front porches would
now be seen by millions.
The parade began at 1:30 p.m. by traveling south on Lake Street from
11th Street. It traveled down Lake Street to Orange Avenue and then to
Fifth Street where it turned north to Main Street (that part is no longer
there), it then went up Main to Yorktown Avenue where it circled our new
civic center. The parade then turned onto Lake Street again and traveled
south to Lake Park where it disbanded.
But during the parade New Yorkers got a firsthand look at our Mayor
Harriett Wieder in all her splendor.
The California legislature had proclaimed by official act that our
1976 parade was to be the “Official State of California July Fourth
Parade.”
What an honor for our city.
Western TV star Earle Holliman served as grand marshal. The parade’s
theme was “Let Freedom Ring” and featured as honorary grand marshal,
Major General Robert E. Johnson of the 40th Infantry division of the
California National Guards. But it was newsman George Putnam riding his
horse King that was the most popular for local TV fans.
Also in the parade that year was comedienne Martha Raye and Huntington
Beach’s own Layne Neugart.
Huntington Beach’s float recreated the firing on Fort Sumpter. and the
float carried the city queens. Westminster’s float was in the form of the
Statue of Liberty. And what is a parade with out the Shriners in their
colorful outfits and in this parade were many in their miniature cars.
Over 250,000 people lined our streets to watch that parade go by and
several million sat watching in their living rooms -- all four hours of
it.
Since that first national exposure using the eye of the television
camera, the media has come to share the very best of the Huntington Beach
Fourth of July parade.
* JERRY PERSON is a local historian and longtime Huntington Beach
resident. If you have ideas for future columns, write him at P.O. Box
7182, Huntington Beach, CA 92615.
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