Jan 16, 2011 2:42 - By: Whit Honea

MLK Parade in Seattle
Cities all across America are celebrating Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., this weekend. Here is a list of cities with popular events and parades (click name of city for event list):
Houston
Seattle
Atlanta
New Orleans
San Francisco
Philadelphia
Boston
San Diego
Miami
Indianapolis
Chicago
Washington, D.C.
New York City
Los Angeles
Denver
St. Louis
Dallas
Obviously there are more cities celebrating the life and legacy of Dr. King – if your town isn’t listed please check your local paper or community website for more information.
Photo by Seattle Municipal Archives via Flickr
Sep 26, 2010 9:35 - By: Tiffany Joyce

Participants in the Parada del Sol in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Scottsdale Arizona’s Parada del Sol (which means “walk in the sun” in Spanish) is a month-long celebration of Scottsdale’s Western roots. Now entering its 58th consecutive year, the festivities kick off on February 11th, 2011. The inaugural event hearkens back to the days of the Pony Express, when the Hashknife Pony Express rides into downtown Scottsdale from the town of Holbrook, over 200 miles away. The two dozen riders are lead by the Navajo County Hashknife Sheriff’s Posse and deliver 20,000 first-class letters by horseback.
The celebration continues with the world’s longest horse-drawn parade on February 12th – the parade route runs north on Scottsdale Road from Oak to Indian School Road. Immediately following the parade is the Trail’s End Celebration held in Old Town Scottsdale on 1st Avenue and Main Street, between Brown and Scottsdale Roads. The celebration includes dancing, live music, arts and crafts, food and beverage vendors, children’s activities, and rodeos.
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Oct 08, 2009 15:15 - By: Whit Honea
Like any good fish story, this one got away. That’s right, you just missed Salmon Days in Issaquah, WA and you should be ashamed of yourself. Go ahead and cry it out. I’ll wait.
Okay, enough. You brought it upon yourself. Now sit still and let me tell you what you missed, aka, rub it in.
Every year about this time the salmon leave the deep, salty waters of Seattle’s Puget Sound and they start swimming. They swim through lakes and streams and wind their way to Issaquah Creek, where the water is shallow and clear. They swim all the way to the hatchery in which they were born, they do their thing with the eggs and the stuff and then they die. Needless to say the salmon don’t find the occasion as festive as we do. I watched them for hours and never saw a single party hat. Read More »
Jan 15, 2009 10:00 - By: Kim Tracy Prince
Next week people all over America will be celebrating just
how far we’ve come as a nation. Not ones to waste a 3-day weekend, Americans will celebrate
Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday (which is today) on Monday, January 19th. The inauguration of President Barack Obama takes place the next day.
In Los Angeles there is a 20-plus year tradition of people dancing in the streets for MLK day. While
celebratory and reflective events will
take place all weekend all over the area, the big main parade happens on the official holiday in Los Angeles. Although King’s birthday was officially designated a national holiday in 1983, this is only the 24th year of the parade.

courtesy of celesking.com
This year the parade will begin at 10:30 AM at the corner of Western Ave. and Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd in Los Angeles. The route goes west to Crenshaw and south to Vernon, and depending where you are on the route, the entire processional should last about two and a half hours. This year’s parade will feature 18 marching bands, floats, and celebrity guests including Tyler Perry, Tony Grant, and Orlando Brown.
Celesking Bail Bonds, sponsor of the parade this year, says that a visitor’s best bet for parking will be at the parade’s end near
Leimert Park, where an all-day
“Presidential Dreams” Fest and Gospel Celebration will be taking place with live music and food vendors. One great intention of the parade’s organizers that I hope will actually come true is the ban on vendors on the parade route between Degnan and Crenshaw. That’s the TV and judging area, so one might have to get there early for a spot on those two blocks, but it might be worth it. Anyone who’s ever taken a kid to a parade learns to dread those guys selling cheap trinkets on their rolling carts who seem to exist solely to block your view of the parade, start your children whining, and add to your collection of useless clutter.
Most people use this holiday to go on a short vacation. Why not join a celebration that actually has something to do with this special day, which is one of only three national holidays that celebrates an individual person. What a remarkable person, indeed.