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Chattanooga is home to the longest, continuously staged Armed Forces Day Parade in this country.
The military co-chairs for the first parade in 1949: Tennessee’s Alvin York, this nation’s most decorated soldier in World War I - and Charles H. Coolidge, Chattanooga’s own decorated hero in World War II.
This Friday, the 75th annual parade will step off at 10:30 AM from the intersection of Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard and Market St., travel down Market Street to West Aquarium Way, turn left and then finish at Chestnut St. - the same route as last fall’s parade for Capt. Larry Taylor, recipient of the Medal of Honor.
The grand marshal for this year’s parade: B.B. Bell, retired four-star U.S. Army General - also the keynote speaker for the luncheon after the parade, starting at Noon at the Chattanooga Convention Center.
I spoke with him - and a fellow alum of this campus: Mickey McCamish, retired U.S. Navy Captain with the Chattanooga Area Veterans Council, which hosts the parade.
By WUTCChattanooga is home to the longest, continuously staged Armed Forces Day Parade in this country.
The military co-chairs for the first parade in 1949: Tennessee’s Alvin York, this nation’s most decorated soldier in World War I - and Charles H. Coolidge, Chattanooga’s own decorated hero in World War II.
This Friday, the 75th annual parade will step off at 10:30 AM from the intersection of Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard and Market St., travel down Market Street to West Aquarium Way, turn left and then finish at Chestnut St. - the same route as last fall’s parade for Capt. Larry Taylor, recipient of the Medal of Honor.
The grand marshal for this year’s parade: B.B. Bell, retired four-star U.S. Army General - also the keynote speaker for the luncheon after the parade, starting at Noon at the Chattanooga Convention Center.
I spoke with him - and a fellow alum of this campus: Mickey McCamish, retired U.S. Navy Captain with the Chattanooga Area Veterans Council, which hosts the parade.