Hamilton Journal News

4th of July

- Contact this contributi­ng writer at 513-581-6538 or email Michael.Pitman@ coxinc.com.

dence Day parade crossed the High-Main bridge into the city’s west side.

“I held my breath when I got to the (Soldiers, Sailors and Pioneers) monument. When I crested the bridge, all of Main Street was completely full of people,” he said. “I was tickled to death that people like having it go that way.”

Troy and Kath Schwable are the co-chairs of the Hamilton July 4th committee and appreciate the city council and the mayor being among the volunteers for the parade.

“Kathy and I both have had comments,” Schwable started as he leaned forward, as if looking at something unbelievab­le. “‘Is that so-and-so on council?’ If you look around, our whole city council’s here directing parade participan­ts to their assigned divisions and rows.”

Though it does surprise some that the city’s elected officials are working the Fourth of July parade, Schwable said, “That’s our city. That’s what we do.”

This year’s theme for the July 4th festivitie­s is “Ice Cream, Baseball, Apple Pie & the 4th of July, Hamilton, Ohio.” Entrants in the parade include the Joe Nuxhall Miracle League, the Butler County Challenger League, and pending their schedules, Schwable hopes they can get the West Side Little League and other youth baseball leagues, as well as the Hamilton Joes.

He also said Cincinnati Reds mascots will be in the parade.

Before and after the parade, they plan to have music at the gazebo outside the Historic Butler County Courthouse featuring the Hamilton Concert Band and the Queen City Sisters, but all of downtown Hamilton will be “like an old-fashioned ice cream social, where everybody is simply having fun. That’s the point of the Fourth of July. We’re there to celebrate, to have a good time.”

While Schwable appreciate­d Hamilton’s council and the mayor help during the event, he also said there are others around the city, from those in the police and public works department­s, the Greater Hamilton Chamber of Commerce, the Main Street Associatio­n, and the

Hamilton Amusement Hospitalit­y Associatio­n and more who have helped celebrate the birth of the nation.

Though the parade and downtown festivitie­s end at 2 p.m., the celebratio­n goes on. Many downtown and Main Street businesses and restaurant­s will have holiday hours, and the party shifts to RiversEdge Park at 6 with That Arena Rock Show playing until the fireworks show at 10. Fireworks are to be ignited from Veterans Park.

Parade entrants can still request a spot, and sponsors can still sign on, which helps finance the daylong celebratio­n. For more informatio­n, visit hamiltonju­ly4th.org.

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