Close X
Sunday, October 13, 2024
ADVT 
International

Americans shrug off searing heat to celebrate Fourth of July with parades, cookouts and fireworks

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Jul, 2024 01:03 PM
  • Americans shrug off searing heat to celebrate Fourth of July with parades, cookouts and fireworks

The burgers aren't the only things sizzling this Fourth of July: Millions of people are under heat warnings as large numbers of Americans traveled to toast their nation’s birth with parades, cookouts and fiery splashes of colors against the evening sky.

Travel records are projected to fall with people already jamming airports and crowding highways ahead of the Fourth of July to get to their destinations. Across the West, meanwhile, residents were dealing with stifling heat as the National Weather Service warned of a “significant and extremely dangerous” heat wave across much of the region.

Fireworks — a staple for the holiday — were expected to reach an all-time high with an untold number of backyard displays in addition to 16,000 professional shows lighting up the horizon from sea to shining sea.

“This is how we celebrate. It’s the bombs bursting in air. It’s the rockets’ red glare. That’s how people show their pride and patriotism,” said Julie Heckman of the American Pyrotechnics Association.

All signs pointed to big celebrations: The Transportation Security Administration reported that a record-breaking nearly 3 million people traveled through airports in a single day last week, and that figure is expected to be broken this week. And AAA projected that 60.6 million people will travel by car during the holiday period. Part of the boost was attributed to easing inflation, though many Americans remain concerned about the economy.

On the much of the West Coast, residents were advised to take precautions to avoid overheating on the holiday.

Temperatures were expected to top 100 degrees (38 degrees Celsius) across both coastal and inland areas of California, with heat spreading into the Pacific Northwest. Some spots in the desert Southwest were expecting temperatures topping 120 degrees (49 degrees Celsius). Hot, muggy conditions also permeated the Deep South and Middle Atlantic.

The Northern California city of Oroville’s annual fireworks were canceled as an estimated 26,000 residents remained displaced by the growing Thompson Fire, while hundreds of firefighters toiled under extreme heat to keep flames from reaching more homes.

In suburban Chicago, Highland Park was resuming its annual Independence Day Parade on the second anniversary of a mass shooting that took seven lives and injured dozens at the 2022 event. Residents gathered at a middle school for a remembrance ceremony Thursday before the holiday march, which followed a different route than in the past.

“July Fourth is always going to be a day of mixed emotion,” Mayor Nancy Rotering said. “We come forth today hoping we as a community can remember and honor the lives lost.”

The holiday celebrating the Declaration of Independence, which established a new country free from British rule, is traditionally marked by barbecue, cold drinks and the Stars and Stripes on flagpoles and on clothing, in addition to parades. But Americans were also celebrating in other ways unique to their communities.

Off the rocky coast in Down East, Maine, some planned to enjoy lobster boat races. Descendants of the signers of the Declaration of Independence were ringing the Liberty Bell 13 times — once for each of the original colonies — in Philadelphia. The California communities of Bolinas and Stinson Beach, north of San Francisco, were engaging in their annual tug-of-war contest in which losers end up in a lagoon.

And, of course, there’s the annual hot dog eating contest on New York’s Coney Island.

In Alaska, the city of Seward got a head start with a fireworks display at midnight, as thousands of people gathered on a rocky beach to watch during the brief window where the sky dims in the land of the midnight sun. The shells burst over Resurrection Bay as people watched in silence. “It was absolutely magical,” said resident Iris Woolfolk.

The July Fourth holiday generally unites Americans in their shared love of country, but the 2024 version comes against a backdrop of deep political polarization and a divisive presidential race.

In Boston, where tens of thousands were expected to enjoy the Boston Pops Fireworks Spectacular, conductor Keith Lockhart said it’s inspiring to see people of different political stripes gather on Charles River Esplanade. But he noted that “one would have to have one’s head pretty deeply stuck in the sand to not notice the deep divisions in our country.”

“It is, indeed, a dangerous time,” he wrote in an email before the show. “If, even for one day, we can set aside our differences and embrace our commonalities, this has to be a positive thing.”

 

MORE International ARTICLES

Pakistan Knew About Osama's Presence On Its Soil: Imran Khan

Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan has said that his country knew about the presence of Osama bin Laden on its soil and that the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) provided information to the CIA,

Pakistan Knew About Osama's Presence On Its Soil: Imran Khan

Pakistan's Sindh Government Starts Work To Implement Hindu Marriage Law

Pakistan's Sindh Government Starts Work To Implement Hindu Marriage Law
After three years of dithering, the government of Pakistan's Sindh province has started work for implementation of the much-awaited Hindu Marriage Bill 2016, The Express Tribune reported.

Pakistan's Sindh Government Starts Work To Implement Hindu Marriage Law

Pakistan Willing To Give Up Nuclear Weapons If India Does: PM Imran Khan

Pakistan Willing To Give Up Nuclear Weapons If India Does: PM Imran Khan
Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan has said his country would be willing to give up its nuclear weapons if India did the same.    

Pakistan Willing To Give Up Nuclear Weapons If India Does: PM Imran Khan

Trump's Lies Have Exceeded 10,000, Say Former Diplomats

Trump's Lies Have Exceeded 10,000, Say Former Diplomats
A day after Trump created a diplomatic storm by saying that Prime Minister Narendra Modi had suggested to him in Osaka, Japan, that he should mediate or arbitrate in the Kashmir issue

Trump's Lies Have Exceeded 10,000, Say Former Diplomats

Israeli Envoy To India: An Academic, Yoga Lover With Focus On Bolstering Ties

With his 25 years of experience as an army officer of which nine were spent in the intelligence wing of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), the close defence ties between India and Israel are set to get a fillip.

Israeli Envoy To India: An Academic, Yoga Lover With Focus On Bolstering Ties

Boris Johnson: Uk's First US-Born, 'One-Man Melting Pot' PM

Johnson, who prevailed over Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt to become the Conservative Party leader, was himself Foreign Secretary under outgoing Premier Theresa May and thus becomes the first holder of the post to rise to the top, after his Conservative predecessor John Major in 1990.

Boris Johnson: Uk's First US-Born, 'One-Man Melting Pot' PM