c. 1942
Image: Weegee(Arthur Fellig)/International Center of Photography/Getty Images
On Thanksgiving morning in 1924, Macy’s department store in New York City held a parade to drum up business and publicity. The theme was Christmas (and shopping for gifts).
Store employees dressed in outrageous costumes and walked six miles from Harlem down to the Macy’s flagship store in Herald Square, accompanied by festive floats and animals from the Central Park Zoo.
The first parade ended with Santa Claus ascending to a golden throne above the store’s entrance and inviting thousands of customers to come and shop.
The parade was such a success that it became an annual tradition.
Some participants were less than enthused, however. The zoo animals, accustomed to life in captivity, often became cranky and irritable on the long march. They were soon replaced by more pliable creatures — massive balloon animals, the first of which was Felix the Cat in 1927.
In a tradition that has since been discontinued, at the end of each parade the balloons were released and allowed to drift away in the wind. Anyone who recovered a balloon and returned it to Macy’s would receive a gift.
Today, the parade route has been shortened to 2.5 miles. The route is lined with more than 3.5 million spectators, and viewed on television by 50 million.
The parade has become such an institution that it is commonly referred to simply as the “Macy’s Day Parade."
1929
Image: Underwood Archives/Getty Images
1932
Image: NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1932
Image: NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1934
Image: NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1937
Image: Walter Kelleher/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1933
Image: NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1933
Image: NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1933
Image: NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1933
Image: NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1934
Image: FPG/Getty Images
1938
Image: Walter Kelleher/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1933
Image: NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1937
Image: Walter Kelleher/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1945
Image: Gordon Rynders/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1931
Image: NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1937
Image: NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1939
Image: Joe Costa/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1932
Image: NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1937
Image: Walter Kelleher/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1941
Image: Walter Kelleher/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1946
Image: Klein/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1947
Image: Art Whittaker/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1948
Image: Art Whittaker/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1955
Image: Hal Mathewson/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1938
Image:Walter Kelleher/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1954
Image: NBC/NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images
1955
Image: Hal Mathewson/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
1964
Image: NBC/NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images
Curation:
When Brigitte Bardot met Pablo Picasso, notorious ladies man
David Bowie's dress: A powerful step forward for androgyny
1922: The discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb — in color
1939: France's last public execution by guillotine
Try not to gag at these photos of vintage eating contests
A century of bawdy fun at the Moulin Rouge
What the 1977 NYC blackout looked like from the streets
1969: Photos of the historic Rolling Stones comeback concert in Hyde Park
Building VW Beetles, the 'People's Car' of Germany
Railroad trestles created a vast and handsome network across America
1940: Photos of a sweaty square dance in the Oklahoma Dust Bowl
Why creepers flocked to the Flatiron Building in 1902