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Arlington鈥檚 massive July 4 parade, No. 58.5, is ready to roll again

The Arlington Museum of Art's float rolls down the street during Arlington's Fourth of July Parade on July 4, 1990
Courtesy photo
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Arlington Art Association Records, UTA Special Collections
The Arlington Museum of Art's float rolls down the street during Arlington's Fourth of July Parade on July 4, 1990

Arlington鈥檚 population had just passed the 50,000 population mark in 1965 when Dortheda 鈥淒ottie鈥 Lynn and a few members of Church Women United decided Arlington needed a little Independence Day spirit.

Maybe a parade. Sort of.

They organized a little loop-the-loop around the paths of Randol Mill Park, with roughly 100 kids decorating their bikes with small American flags and red-white-and-blue bunting, many of the bicycles with playing cards in the spokes. This sort of made them sound motorbike-like. Sort of.

If you go

What: Arlington Independence Day Parade

When: 9 a.m.

Find on the city鈥檚 website.

A phenomenon occurred. People showed up for this little event. Lots of them. So much so that kids took a couple of encore park loops. An impromptu kazoo band played a rendition of 鈥淵ankee Doodle Dandy,鈥 along with a semi-recognizable try at 鈥淪tars and Stripes Forever.鈥 Collectively, it was a big thing starting small.

鈥淚 knew right away that something bigger could come of this. Should come of this,鈥 Lynn told an Arlington Citizen-Journal reporter back in the 1970s.

Members of the Sikh community march in the Arlington Independence Day Parade.
Courtesy photo
/
Arlington 4th of July Association
Members of the Sikh community march in the Arlington Independence Day Parade.

And so it did. Very quickly the parade event became a , moved downtown and is now the longest-running event in Arlington. Might well be the biggest July 4 parade in Texas, although a few other Uncle Sams could stake that claim. It鈥檚 a 2-mile montage of red-white-and-blue melting pot Americana that begins on the UT-Arlington 鈥淪outh Forty鈥 parking lot, winding its way back north through the college district, looping to City Hall and then south again to the original parking lot.

Ninety minutes, maybe a little more. The crowd is bigger, lots bigger, than the Randol Mill event, now with roughly 100,000 spectators.

Lynn, once a Princeton University secretary for Albert Einstein, chaired the then-new Arlington 4th of July Association for four years, eventually becoming one of the first women City Council members, as well as the namesake for Dottie Lynn Parkway and the Dottie Lynn Recreation Center. She died in 2006. The parade, though, goes on.

The July 4 event will be parade No. 59, or maybe 58.5. The COVID-19 epidemic forced the first-time-ever cancellation of the parade in 2020.

This was a development, current association President Kevin Donovan said, that board members found intolerable.

鈥淲e dressed in red, white and blue, met in the South Forty, and at 9 a.m. walked the entire parade route,鈥 Donovan said. 鈥淪o, technically, we鈥檝e never not had a parade since 1965.鈥

One of the more popular parade participants, the Moslah Car-Vettes, rides in the Arlington Independence Day Parade.
Courtesy photo
/
Arlington 4th of July Association
One of the more popular parade participants, the Moslah Car-Vettes, rides in the Arlington Independence Day Parade.

There have been a couple of near misses. Rain is a rarity, a statistical improbability in this part of Texas on July 4 at the exact time of the parade, but it does happen.

鈥淲e delayed one parade a half hour because of lightning proximity and another an hour when we suffered a deluge,鈥 Donovan recalls.

Donovan works in the parking lot staging area at the parade and was present during the deluge year.

鈥淚t made a mess of many of the floats,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he Arlington Conservation Council had created these really ornate, large and colorful paper flowers, which slowly melted down into unrecognizable clumps.鈥

The parade went on after the rain anyway, the floats soggy and lumpish, the spectators damp but enthusiastic.

Two of the long-standing parade traditions are the naming of a parade marshal and a theme. The theme this year is 鈥淗ome Run for Heroes.鈥 The parade marshal this time around will be former Major League Baseball Cy Young Award-winning pitcher Ferguson 鈥淔ergie鈥 Jenkins, whose more than 3,000 strikeouts and 284 wins make him the top Black pitcher in MLB history.

鈥淲e鈥檒l also have a float with the World Series trophy the Rangers won this year, accompanied by an entourage of the Rangers Six Shooters,鈥 said Claudia Perkins, also a board member.

Parade participants historically vary: High school bands and Cub Scouts on bikes. Cheerleaders and drill teams. Moslah drivers of tiny 鈥渃ar-vettes.鈥 Korean veterans, mounted patrols, Sikhs, church groups and even an atheist association.

鈥淚鈥檝e been doing this since 1997, and it鈥檚 still a fun thing for me,鈥 Donovan said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 one of the truly community events in Arlington, and really is a melting pot. It鈥檚 an event anyone can attend or participate in 鈥 no season tickets, no reservations, all free right here in downtown Arlington.鈥

O.K. Carter is a columnist at the Arlington Report. You may contact him at o.k.carter@arlingtonreport.org.

This first appeared on and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.