7 things you should know about the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade

It’s a Thanksgiving Day tradition: the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.

This year’s gathering celebrated the 89th year of making its way down some major Manhattan thoroughfares to Macy’s flagship store at Herald Square. Millions saw it in person; millions more watched from home.

A crowd believed to exceed 3 million came out for the show on a brisk but sunny Thanksgiving morning, with temperatures hitting the 50s by the time Santa Claus concluded the festivities.

Security was high. The New York Times reported a heavy police presence in the city, including sharpshooters, helicopters, specially trained dogs, officers with radiation detectors and plainclothes officers mixed among the crowd.

“(There are) things the public will see and, of course, things the public will not see,” James P. O’Neill, the New York Police Department’s chief of department, told the newspaper. “All of this will ensure that New York City has a safe and wonderful Thanksgiving, as we do every year.”

Here are some things you should know about this treasured holiday tradition:

It was originally a Christmas parade.

Macy’s has been at its current flagship location, at Broadway and 34th Street, since 1902. (The original store, incidentally, was about 20 blocks south, on Sixth Avenue near 14th Street.) Continuing expansion made the location what Macy’s called the “world’s largest store,” an entire city block with more than 1 million square feet of retail space.

In celebration, in 1924, employees organized a Christmas parade featuring “floats, bands, animals from the zoo and 10,000 onlookers,” according to a Macy’s history page. It also started way up at 145th Street, about 70 blocks north of where it begins in 2015. The parade concluded with Santa Claus and the unveiling of the store’s Christmas windows. Three years later, the Christmas Parade was renamed the Thanksgiving Day Parade.

Macy’s didn’t invent the practice. Philadelphia has the oldest Thanksgiving Day parade: Its Gimbels Thanksgiving Day Parade, now the 6ABC – Dunkin’ Donuts Thanksgiving Day Parade, debuted in 1920.

The balloons have been around almost since the beginning.

According to Mental Floss, the balloon attractions debuted in 1927, inspired by a balloon float. Even then, they were massive — one was a 60-foot dinosaur — and, in those days, they had more to deal with than just high winds and crazy weather: Until 1938, an elevated train ran down Sixth Avenue.

Well-known characters have been part of the parade since that 1927 outing. Felix the Cat was there from the beginning, and Mickey Mouse joined in 1934, the same year that featured a balloon based on popular entertainer Eddie Cantor. “Peanuts” characters, especially Snoopy — who made his first appearance in 1968 — are regular visitors.

This year’s balloons included Angry Birds’ Red and “Ice Age’s” Scrat.

One tradition didn’t last long. The balloons were originally allowed to float away, and those who found them got a gift certificate from Macy’s.

The parade was first broadcast on the radio.

You had to use your imagination when the first broadcasts of the parade took place in 1932; they were on the radio. The parade was first televised in 1946 in New York and then nationally on NBC the next year.

NBC again hosted the festivities this year with the “Today” show’s Matt Lauer, Savannah Guthrie and Al Roker.

Fans can watch the balloons get inflated.

It’s hard to keep things hidden on an island as cramped as Manhattan, and the Macy’s balloons are no exception. They’re inflated at a staging area at 77th Street and Central Park West, near the American Museum of Natural History. For many families, watching the balloons get ready is just as much a tradition as the parade itself.

The balloons are constructed at Macy’s Parade Studio in Moonachie, New Jersey.

The route has changed in recent years.

For years, the parade’s Midtown route went right down Broadway, Manhattan’s spine. But in 2009, the route was moved to Seventh Avenue because of new pedestrian plazas along Broadway. It was changed to Sixth Avenue in 2011.

Given the parade’s draw as a tourist attraction, this did not go over well.

“Why would Macy’s want to have a parade go down lifeless and empty Sixth Avenue rather than through Times Square?” Times Square Alliance President Tim Tompkins asked the New York Daily News. “My members are dazed and confused by this decision.”

This year’s parade began at 77th Street and Central Park West, cut east at 59th Street/Columbus Circle along Central Park’s southern border and then headed south on Sixth Avenue. At 34th Street, it moved west and ended at Macy’s.

It hasn’t always gone well.

It looks so nice on television, doesn’t it?

But late November in New York can be dicey. In 1957, a wet day got wetter for people near a Popeye balloon: The character’s hat filled with water and drenched paradegoers. The same thing happened in 1962 with a Donald Duck hat.

Superman once lost his arm to tree branches.

But the worst was probably 1997, a blustery day in the Big Apple. During that parade, winds reached more than 40 miles per hour, and the balloons were difficult to control.

One balloon struck a lamppost and injured four people; one woman was in a coma for a month. The Pink Panther threatened a woman holding its ropes.

“The balloon was caught on top of me and my daughter,” she told The New York Times. “We thought it was going to smother us.”

The parade remains a huge attraction.

It’s not just a parade, of course: It’s full-scale entertainment for millions.

This year’s festivities included Questlove, Mariah Carey, Panic! at the Disco and Miss America 2016 Betty Cantrell. Cast members of several Broadway shows, such as “Fiddler on the Roof,” “On Your Feet!” and “Something Rotten,” performed. (This being NBC, it also rolled out a preview of its live version of “The Wiz.”)

All told, there were more than 1,000 cheerleaders and dancers, 1,000 clowns and 12 marching bands. Oh, and Santa Claus.

And if that wasn’t enough entertainment, Macy’s will open at 6 p.m. for shopping.

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