On Childhood
Memories-With The Somerville, Ma Honk! Parade In Mind
By Frank Jackman
[I normally confine
myself to current events political commentary or some especially significant
anniversary or comment on some event of historical import from the distant past
but the other night I ran into Fritz Taylor, a guy I have known for a number of
years and a fellow Vietnam War veteran, at Jack’s over in Cambridge where I
still like to grab a quick drink when I am in that town. He had just finished
up marching in the annual Honk! Parade (that ! belongs there and is no typo)
which starts in Somerville and ends in Harvard Square. While we were chatting
about this and that he started talking about his childhood remembrances of parades
down South in his hometown of Mill Ridge in Georgia. This piece is a short take
on what he talked about which might interest those who have their own memories
of childhood parades, of long ago parade traditions which attempted to unite
communities and did on occasion. Frank Jackman]
*****
Fritz Taylor, was, is a
man of institutional memories. Will tell you that using that exact term
himself. By that he means that he has grown over the years to think more about
certain critical events that formed his life ever since he was a small fry (his
term) down in rural Georgia. And do it by comparisons on occasion. Fritz had
recently participated in the annual Honk! Parade which is something of an
alternative parade from the ones in his, my, maybe your childhood when some
town volunteer association, or the town itself went all out on say Memorial
Day, July 4th, Christmas time for examples and gathered up various
organizations, groups and clubs to form some sort of celebration for town folk,
for the young really.
The way Fritz put it
(and I agreed and you would probably do so too) was that the organizers grabbed
every viable civic organization, band and exotic float assemblage possible. So
an average parade would have the local high school band (maybe college if one
was nearby), the school glee club, the school majorette baton twirlers and
cheerleaders, 4-H club if in a rural area like his Mill Ridge growing up home,
the Elks, Masons, Lions and such, church bands, CYO, Demo-lay, choirs, and
whatever other cheap transport musical organization available. Then a ton of
automobile, open convertible types housing various public officials, fire
engines, police cars, street sweepers, public works dump trucks and so on. Also
assorted walkers carrying signs advertising some drugstore, pizza parlor or
supermarket usually with some pretty girl leading the procession. Naturally as
well floats sponsored by various organizations the most important one being the
float carrying the Queen of the May, the town queen or event queen and her
court of a bevy of young lovelies. Throw in a few clowns, geeks, nerds,
hispsters and some misplaced derelicts and wanderers and you have pretty full
picture. Oh yeah, and placed here at the end not by accident the local VFW,
American Legion or specialized veterans organizations of specific wars like the
Spanish- American War.
That last category the
Spanish-American War veterans (you know the guys who went up San Juan Hill with
Teddy R. and hi-jacked Cuba for a few decades or hijacked the Philippines, Puerto
Rico other such spots) is what fascinated Fritz when he was a small fry
(remember his term), well, that and those wholesome well-shaped lovelies on
those preposterous floats when he came of age to notice such things. He said he
would always remember these ancient men walking, slowly walking mostly, some
with canes some aided by comrades, with erect carriage usually wearing their
Sunday best suit laden with medals on their lapels. (Probably when he first
started to watch parades in the early 1950s these men were in there seventies
and early eighties and so ancient to a young boy who probably thought twenty
was ancient in the great scheme of things.) Would notice each year that there
were maybe fewer marching, more with canes or being aided but always treated by
the very patriotic crowds with much hand-clapping and salutes.
Fast forward to
Somerville Honk! Parade-2017
If the parades of Fritz’s
youth were filled with civic pride and immense patriotic fervor the Honk!
Parade is the antithesis. Started
several years ago this
parade features every type of odd-ball band which can put instruments and
outlandish costume together each Columbus Day Sunday beginning at noon (also
known as Indigenous Peoples Day among politically correct progressives in some
quarters). Add in people on stilts, people riding bicycles, floats and whatever
pleases them. Add in all kinds of progressive activist and peace groups and you
get a feel for what is going on that day in Somerville as it wends its way to
finish line Harvard Square a couple of miles down the road. A Very Blue occasion
in a very blue state in a very blue town. Each year for the past few years, years
in which Fritz has felt duty-bound to march, a contingent from Veterans for
Peace his organization since after Vietnam War times when he finally got “religion”
(my term) on the issue has participated in the extravaganza.
Veterans for Peace has a
great portion of its local membership culled from those who served in ancient times
Vietnam War (a war now being examined by
Ken Burns/Lynn Novack in an eighteen hour ten part series on PBS). So come
Columbus Day Sunday those who line up to march are very similar in age to those
old days Spanish-American War veterans from Fritz’s Mill Ridge growing up days.
Except they tend to be a rag-tag army of guys wearing anything from shorts to
long pants along with an assortment of VFP tee-shirts of different colors and
with different slogans embossed on the back). And of course the now very familiar
and famous flags of white with a black dove embossed on them which stick out in
an event thet participate in. As Fritz ambled along Massachusetts Avenue as it
turned into Cambridge he wondered if the many small fry who lined the route
with their parents were as fascinated with the ancient VFP contingent as he has
been with those old men Spanish-American war veterans. He hoped so and hoped
they got a very different message from than he had back in the day. Thanks
Fritz
[I did not march that day
since I have been recovering from knee replacement surgery but I expect to be
back on the line next year to wonder Fritz’s wonder. Frank Jackman]
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