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Here's why America's Memorial Day car parades are great

Convertibles aren’t as popular as they used to be, but they’re the most important cars on the road on Memorial Day weekend, as they transport many elder or injured veterans in parades across America.

Other classic cars and trucks often join them, turning some events into all-out car shows, but with a noble cause.

“Memorial Day weekend is a national holiday and the surrounding parades and celebrations are a way for Americans to honor the fallen and celebrate, patriotically, the beginning of summer,” Jonathan Klinger, vice president of culture at automotive lifestyle brand Hagerty, told Fox News Autos.

“Along with July 4th and Labor Day, Memorial Day parades have become a deep-rooted, organic part of the tradition and pomp.”

Classic convertibles like the 1967 Chevrolet Camaro SS provide the perfect perch for veterans to receive salutations from the crowd in Commerce City, Colorado, home to the state’s largest Memorial Day parade. (Kathryn Scott/The Denver Post via Getty Images)

She said it started out with just the veterans visiting the five cemeteries in town to salute their fallen comrades. Over the years, though, they were joined by a drum corps, poppy girls, members of the town’s service organizations and sports teams. “Eventually, it became a full parade.”

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The route they followed ended with a road that led uphill to Crownhill cemetery, and that’s where the cars started coming in. 

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A local car dealer lent them vehicles to use in those days, including muscle cars like Pontiac GTOs and Dodge Chargers. 

“The weekend of the parade we’d go over to Hall’s Motors and they’d lend us all these great convertibles, and we’d use those in the parade driving the veterans and he’d let us drive them the whole weekend,” Rice recalled.

The Chicago suburb hosts one of the state’s largest parades, where organizer Tom Parker said 30,000 to 40,000 people show up to watch each year.

Red Ford Mustang

Ford sold over 600,000 1966 Mustangs and they are a common site at parades across the country, including Naperville’s. (iStock/EAGiven)

Parker is a West Point graduate whose two decades of service in the U.S. Army and reserves as an aviation officer and helicopter pilot included an 18-month tour of Iraq.

He said the city “has an unparalleled level of support for the veteran community” and that he never has trouble finding people who want to drive.

Rice, who was given a community service award for her work on the parade, feels lucky to have the day to honor the vets, and thinks Amherst is a wonderful community for what it does for them.

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“If I were looking for a place to live again, it would be here,” she said.

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