
Block-length July 4 parade continues on Portland Avenue in St. Paul
Landreman, who had only lived on Portland Avenue for about a year, repeated the celebration the following 4th of July, as did Schaffner and others interested in their impromptu, one-block musical parade in the Lexington-Hamline neighborhood of St. Paul. More residents came the following year, and then the next, inspiring a display of decorated bikes, a sing-along of patriotic tunes and a 'human flag' composed of adults and children holding up color-coded poster boards to form a giant American flag.
'The part I like to say is the flag wouldn't be complete unless everybody did their part,' said Landreman, who predicted some 50 attendees would show up Friday for the neighborhood social's 40th anniversary. 'Calling it my homily would be too strong, but it's kind of like our country. We need everybody to participate.'
'It's super simple,' he added. 'It's like small town Americana. It's not over the top, with bright lights and huge sound systems.'
The tradition continues at 10 a.m. Friday with a sing-along rendition of the 'Star-Spangled Banner' and 'America the Beautiful,' followed by a recitation of the Declaration of Independence, with each attendee reading aloud about two lines.
'One of the guiding principles is this is not a spectator event,' Landreman said. 'Everybody participates. We kind of pass it around so everybody reads a line or two. That actually takes a while. I don't know how long it's been since you've read the Declaration of Independence, but it's actually quite long.'
Schaffner died in 2022 and his widow, Patricia, moved to the west metro. Landreman's wife Mary passed away a decade ago. But the tradition they all founded together continues, with the marching band — 'kind of a ragtag group,' said Landreman — drawing anywhere from three to eight performers, depending upon the year. Kids decorate scooters and bikes for the parade, which features a ceremonial passing of the American flag each year to the next flag bearer, usually a child.
'This has never been sponsored by anybody,' Landreman said. 'It's totally organic. People come from the neighborhood and make it happen.'
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