Veterans Day parade of 1923
JERRY PERSON
When my dad was a young man, one of the biggest events in his town
was the Veterans Day Parade. Only in his time it was called the
Armistice Day parade and he would recount of how many neighboring
towns would be entered in it.
I noticed that only Fullerton held a large parade in Orange County
and I didn’t hear of anyone from Huntington Beach participating in
it.
That was sure not the case when the city of Orange held its
two-hour parade on Monday, Nov. 12, 1923.
In that historic parade were more than 80 floats alone, of which
six were from Huntington Beach along with several cars and the
Huntington Beach Municipal Band, which was designated the official
band for the parade.
This week we’ll look at the six groups that planned, built and
participated in that event.
The boys and girls from our elementary school constructed their
prize- winning float, The Mayflower Pact, with the help of the school
faculty. Harry Holdridge was a big help in both designing the float
and helping the students in building it. Helping Holdridge in this
endeavor were Winnie Mae Mackey, Pearl Mackey, Elsie Chambers, H.C.
Reid and Howard Morse.
Standard Oil Co. loaned a large truck to the students to build
their masterpiece on.
The boys and girls spent many hours painting the float to
represent the ship that brought the Pilgrims to the New World. George
Wardwell gave the students very helpful tips in painting and
decorating the ship.
A costume committee was formed that included Pearl Mackey, Muriel
Curtis, Barbara Parker, Irene Loose, Harriet Reynolds, Maxwell
Williams, Virgil Johns and Oran Buck.
As you can see this was by no means a small challenge for the
students. The costumes were true to the period even including the
wigs that were worn by the students in the parade.
The students wanted to depict the pilgrims watching the signing of
the first constitutional document in the New World.
Others depicted the pilgrims in prayer and sailors watching from
the ship’s rigging.
Riding in the Mayflower were Robert Hinkle as Miles Standish and
Virgil Johns as John Alden. Also riding were Edward Sommers, Douglas
McAdams, Carl Whitefield, Roscoe Henley, Dean Wright, George Herron,
Carlton Conrad, Elizabeth Wardwell, Frances Greathouse, Marie Terril,
Juanita Wallace and Delitha Ellis.
All the many hours of work paid off for the students as they took
first prize in the parade, a big honor for the student and their
school.
The American Legion’s float was built to resemble a World War I
“Field Kitchen in France” and was built by the members of that
organization that included Claude Fulwider, Grandville Dalzell, R.C.
Reynolds and others. It depicted how our soldiers ate their meager
meals and thinking that this could be their last one.
The Huntington Beach Lions Club float “Early California” showed
the hard life of the early pioneers to our state. James Morris
chaired the committee that oversaw the construction of its beautiful
float.
Not to be out-done, the Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce
entered an exact copy of Robert Fulton’s steamboat Claremont -- or as
the chamber titled it, “Fulton’s Folly” -- with huge side-wheels,
smokestack and deck. It delighted the spectators who lined the parade
route.
The Boys Scouts of Huntington Beach entered its float, “Lewis and
Clark’s Expedition” and included Scouts dressed in fur coats and caps
of the period.
George Washington, taking the oath as president of our great
United States with an American eagle in the background, was the float
entered by the students of Huntington High. It won sixth place. It
depicted our first president and was constructed by the boys in the
manual arts department and was painted by the girls and boys in the
school’s art department.
Harold Riley assumed the role of George Washington with Virgil
Elliott as Alexander Hamilton, Ernest Searom as Robert Livington and
Allison Kenter as John Adams.
The Huntington Beach Camp Fire Girls rode in one of the most
beautifully decorated cars in the parade. And in one of the other one
hundred cars entered in that parade was our Mayor Richard Drew and
the City Council.
As the parade neared its end, the spectators caught sight of Louis
Gates in his spotless uniform leading the members of the Huntington
Beach Municipal Band.
Of the 40,000 who attended that day, hundreds were from Huntington
Beach who came to watch this wonderful event and to remember and
thank all those who fought for this country.
* 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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