Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘The most patriotic city’

Annual armed forces parade honors Coast Guard and service members

- BY EMMETT GIENAPP STAFF WRITER

hen the drums started to roll and the trumpets started to blare the first few notes of “America the Beautiful,” hundreds of faces lining both sides of Market Street lit up and looked to the band marching up the street.

The crowd turned out Friday morning to cheer and wave miniature American flags at the column of high school students, local officials and veterans who processed in patriotic aplomb through downtown Chattanoog­a for the city’s 69th annual Armed Forces Day Parade.

Before the event began, U.S. Rep. Chuck Fleischman­n, R-Tenn., stood in front of the Westin hotel on Pine Street and praised Chattanoog­ans for the support they consistent­ly demonstrat­e for members of the armed services.

“I’ve told everyone from the president of the United States to world leaders that Chattanoog­a is the most patriotic city in America,” he said. “This is Armed Forces Week and it is so important that we honor all of the men and women who are serving in all of our great branches and also our veterans.”

Every year, the city honors a different branch of the military, and Fleischman­n said this year’s parade was meant to focus on the United States Coast Guard.

“The Coast Guard has had a strong inland waterway presence in America. Chattanoog­a is no exception. We have a strong, active, vibrant Coast Guard community here that’s served us well,” he said.

Standing with Fleischman­n before the parade was Vice Adm. Charles Ray, deputy commandant for operations for the Coast Guard, who was invited by Fleischman­n to lead the procession.

“I am really excited to be here in Chattanoog­a today and I’m really thankful for the congressma­n inviting me here to participat­e in this patriotic demonstrat­ion of support for our armed forces,” Ray said. “You hear a lot about this event, and so to get to be here firsthand to participat­e in it, I can’t say enough about how much it means to the men and women of the services for this kind of patriotic display.”

Ray has served across the globe and in six Coast Guard Air Stations from Alaska to the Caribbean, earning more than 5,000 hours of helicopter flight time over the course of his career. He said it was a privilege to participat­e in a parade through this city on the Tennessee River.

In addition to being a military force, he said, members of the Coast Guard serve as both law enforcemen­t and first responders to safeguard the nation’s waterways and the well-being of cities such as Chattanoog­a.

“We’re a military service and have been for over 228 years,” he said. “We’ve been in every conflict that our nation has been in and we’re an advocate and a regulator of maritime industry, so whenever there is river traffic on this great river, we are responsibl­e for making sure the river is navigable for those.”

“It’s really an honor to get to come to a great river city like Chattanoog­a, and the rivers are important to our service as they are to our nation.”

Parents put their toddlers on their shoulders to get a better view of the hundreds of high school students from area high schools who marched in sharp JROTC or band uniforms. Veterans, too, stood with family and friends to watch the procession and salute many of those marching who also wore uniforms.

Robert Johnson, a Vietnam veteran, stood in front of the Hamilton County Courthouse steps snapping photos of the various marching groups as they passed his selfselect­ed post in the shade of a tree.

“I think it’s great to see so many young people come out to show off what they can do and do it all for a good cause,” he said. “A lot of people don’t appreciate what these men and women do for all of us, and I know too many people who served but fell through the cracks when they finally came home.”

“This is a reminder that those people haven’t been forgotten.”

 ?? STAFF PHOTOS BY TIM BARBER ?? United States Coast Guard Vice Adm. Charles W. Ray, right, shakes the hand of WWII veteran Connon Crabb, 91, at the reviewing stand Friday as the annual Armed Forces Day Parade begins. Crabb viewed the planting of the flag at Iwo Jima from his boat....
STAFF PHOTOS BY TIM BARBER United States Coast Guard Vice Adm. Charles W. Ray, right, shakes the hand of WWII veteran Connon Crabb, 91, at the reviewing stand Friday as the annual Armed Forces Day Parade begins. Crabb viewed the planting of the flag at Iwo Jima from his boat....
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER ?? Hixson High School’s ROTC marches north on Market Street on Friday during the annual Armed Forces Day Parade.
STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER Hixson High School’s ROTC marches north on Market Street on Friday during the annual Armed Forces Day Parade.

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