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Century of Cheer: A History of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade

What is Thanksgiving without the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade? The annual march through Manhattan — terminating at Macy’s Department Store — has delighted New Yorkers for a century and been a part of the American tradition of Thanksgiving since it was first broadcast nationally on television in the 1950s.

Macy’s began the parade in 1924 as a way to promote the new Seventh Avenue extension of their Herald Square location — and to overshadow its department store rival Gimbel’s.

That first parade had many of the hallmarks of our modern parade — from floats to Santa Claus – however it was much longer. Six miles!

One major tradition is thankfully gone — releasing the parade balloons into the air and encouraging New Yorkers to chase after them. After one near disaster in 1932 (airplane, meet balloon zebra) this curious contest was discontinued.

By the late 1930s, the real world began seeping into the fairy-tale parade route, and during World War II, the parade was cancelled entirely — a prohibition kicked off in a rather violent balloon deflation ceremony led by Mayor Fiorello La Guardia.

Television would change the parade — and the holiday — forever. With NBC broadcasting starting in the 1950s, people could tune in from across the country, creating more opportunities to promote …. everything!

By the 1970s, the parade was a festival of commercialism, a beloved kitsch-fest featuring lip-syncing vocalists, ever larger balloons, morning show hosts and product placements embedded within other product placements.

But harsh winds and cold could be detrimental to the balloons and, sometimes, to the bystanders. Why will you never see a Cat In The Hall balloon in the parade again?

FEATURING: A cast of B and C list celebrities, thousands of out-of-town marching bands and a few favorite balloons (Snoopy, Underdog, the Tin Man and more)

LISTEN NOW: THE MACY’S THANKSGIVING DAY PARADE


Macy’s Department Store, photo taken from the elevated train platform. 1907. Photo by Irving Underhill. Courtesy Library of Congress
The Tin Man balloon from 1939
The parade in 1939, mapping out the long parade route
The parade in 1938

A 1925 for the extra-long, short-lived rival Christmas Parade, organzied the Namm Store, a department store on Fulton Street in Brooklyn


FURTHER READING

Macy’s Strangest Thanksgiving Day Balloons Ever

Happy Thanksgiving Masking: The Pleasures of Mischief

The real ‘Miracle On 34th Street’: Historical Details of New York’s Most Famous Christmas Movie

The Strange, Surreal History of Celebrity Appearances at the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade

Every Day Is Thanksgiving: A History of the TV Dinner

Wacky, Windy and Weird: 1964 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade

Months After the Draft Riots, New York Celebrates the First National Thanksgiving

Two Great Johns on a Thanksgiving Night

FURTHER LISTENING

Past Bowery Boys episodes related to this week’s show

The Ticker-Tape Parade: A Very New York Celebration

A Whirlwind Tour of Herald Square

Ladies’ Mile: New York’s Gilded Age Shopping District

Dinosaurs and Diamonds: The American Museum of Natural History

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