I am still in the kitchen making breakfast when the police sirens begin to sound. The children, who have been running in and out of the house all morning, shout, “The parade is here! It’s starting!”
Ann Arbor’s only Memorial Day Parade takes place every year (for the last twenty-five years) in the northeast corner of Ann Arbor. A cute little neighborhood parade, it starts at Greenbrier Park and winds its way past our house and down Bardstown on its way to Glacier Highlands Park on Larchmont. This is Pfizer Land, and all the neighbors are out in front of their houses for the first time since the end of winter, talking about housing prices and sales, checking out the new babies, and reconfirming who is having the barbeque this year.
As my children scurry around excitedly, I remind them one last time that they have to be respectful, that Memorial Day is actually a very somber occasion, one that honors the brave men and women who have given their lives to protect our freedom in America, and that although we do not glorify war, their great-grandfathers on both sides were military men.
Leading the parade are three elderly vets carrying the American flag, accompanied by the snappy Huron High School Drumline. The Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, Cub Scouts, Camp Fire Girls, and Brownies are all here in their uniforms, passing out candy with their families. State Representative Pam Byrnes brings a fluffy miniature donkey pulling a covered wagon. The Ann Arbor Chinese Center of Michigan comes with a team of athletic Lion Dancers, jumping and kicking their way down the street. The Ecology Center EcoRide brings a team of bicy-clists. A fire truck and a van from Busch’s add some more color. A long red classic convertible brings up the rear with calliope playing.
The whole neighborhood joins the procession on bikes, scooters, strollers, and wagons decorated with red, white, and blue. We bike down together as a family, stopping to visit with neighbors and friends who live a little further down. As we ride past Mr. Bentley’s old house on Bardstown, we remember how he used to dress in full uniform and salute as the whole parade went by.
Once at the park, everyone settles down quickly as the names of all the Michigan servicemen who were killed in action this past year are read aloud. The Scouts line up to watch the color guard. A Clague student we know plays Taps. Then all the neighborhood children swarm onto the doughnuts before dispersing again out to the bright blue play structures.
This year’s Glacier Area Homeowners Association Memorial Day Parade will be Monday, May 25.
“Your recent article in the Ann Arbor Observer was nice but it wasn’t quite right,” wrote John Ohanian, responding to May’s Event Review of the Glazier Way Memorial Day Parade. We wrote that the parade has been going on for twenty-five years. In fact, it’s been more than forty. “Em Long, Gail Ohanian, Carol Hinton, & Greta Leavenworth started the parade in May 1968,” Ohanian wrote. “The kids decorated their bikes with red, white & blue paper ribbons. The parade started at [Greenbrier] park, went around Middleton & Frederick and ended in the park. There were about 30 kids. Much later, antique cars, a calliope, fire trucks & police cars were added. But the first three years, the parade was started & run by Em, Gail, Carole & Greta.”
Nice article. The parade has been in existence for at least 37 years, possibly more. Our photographs are dated 1977. It was more elaborate then, with antique cars and fire trucks, and a calliope, among other things. There might have been a year or two that it didn’t occur and it may have even been in existence before we moved here in 1977. Thanks for a nice article about it.
This sounds like a great tradition.
Can someone clarify the route of the parade, specifically where at Greenbrier Park it starts?
Also, what time does it start usually? 8am?
Here’s the listing from today’s calendar for the 2017 parade:
emorial Day Parade: Glacier Highlands Neighborhood Association. Ann Arbor Observer tree logo < less Ann Arbor's oldest neighborhood parade--and the best one in the area for young kids and their families--is a 6-block jaunt beginning at Greenbrier Park. Followed by a brief memorial service in Glacier Highlands Park and a chance for kids to play at the playground. Hot dogs, empanadas, and ice cream available. 10 a.m., Frederick to Middleton to Bardstown to Windemere to Barrister. Free. glacierhighlands.org.