Browse Items (33 total)

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This photo was taken at the Randolph Center bridge, at the intersection of North Main and Depot Sts., as the parade passed by, heading north. In this image, policemen Patrick T. McDonnell, Ralph P. Condlin, and Carl P. Macauley are seen riding their…

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This parade took place on May 30, 1943. In the background,behind uniformed, marching groups, the Randolph Drug Co., R. E. Lyons, and the Randolph Theatre can be seen; the movies on the marquee are "Call Out the Marines" and "The Vanishing Virginian".…

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This image shows a parade, likely one of the parades put on by Randolph during World War II. It may be the 1942 Memorial Day parade. A group of policemen march down North Main St. in the parade, holding batons at their sides.

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This parade took place on April 18, 1942, to encourage the selling of war bonds. In this image, the parade passes the McGuire/Brennan Estate at 96 North Main St.

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This group of children dressed in white and holding American flags sits on an embankment outside a house and watches a parade pass by. It's not known which parade they were watching; it may have been the Welcome Home Parade, which welcomed Randolph's…

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These photos were taken as the Armistice Day parade marched south past Stetson Hall (then the Town Hall). This photo was taken from the west side of the street; the GAR memorial cannon can be seen on the right side of the photo. A man waving a dark…

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These photos were taken as the Armistice Day parade marched south past Stetson Hall (then the Town Hall). This photo was taken from the west side of the street; the GAR memorial cannon can be seen on the right side of the photo, and two men together…

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These photos were taken as the Armistice Day parade marched south past Stetson Hall (then the Town Hall). In this image, the First Congregational Church can be seen across the street.

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This float created for Randolph's 1919 Welcome Home Parade by citizens of North Randolph is designed in the shape of a ship, the U.S.S. North Randolph; the float is staffed by a group of men dressed as sailors and women dressed as Red Cross nurses.

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This parade in October 1919 welcomed soldiers home from overseas after World War I. This photograph is taken on North Main St. looking south from around Short St. as the parade marches north. The First Congregational Church can be seen in the…
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