OurBrownCounty 25May-June | Page 50

Lions leading the parade back in 2008 included the two fellows on the right: Jim Oliver and Stu Huffman. spring blossom parade

~ by Amy Huffman Oliver

“ I

ll see you on parade day,” is something I say a lot this time of year.
If you’ ve been here a while, you know that“ parade day” anchors the spring calendar in Brown County and refers to the annual Spring Blossom Parade that steps off from the high school parking lot at 11:00 a. m. in Nashville on the first Saturday in May. This year, the date is May 3, rain or shine.
It’ s my favorite day in Brown County. Neighbors greet neighbors again after our winter slumber in these hills and hollers.
The 2025 parade continues a long legacy of spring celebrations started in 1929 by painter and apple grower, Dale Bessire. The first Apple Blossom Festival lasted a week and crowned
50 Our Brown County • May / June 2025
Mary“ Grandma” Barnes as the first“ Spring Blossom Queen.”
Today, it is thanks to the volunteer power of our local Lion’ s Club that the parade continues as a free event, both for participants and the audience.
This year’ s theme is“ Celebrating Brown County State Park.” The blaring sirens of fire engines, a costumed lion, and this year’ s grand marshal, park property manager Scott Crossley, will announce the start of the parade.
Bringing up the rear you’ ll hear the sputtering engines of antique farm tractors which congregate at the Antique Tractor Show at the 4H fairgrounds held on parade weekend each year.
The very last unit is a battleshipsized American flag donated to the community after the terrorist attacks on 9 / 11 in 2001, first displayed on the side of the Hob Nob restaurant in 2001. The flag’ s immense size requires a dozen or more to carry it over their heads.
Volunteering on parade day has been a staple of our family history for three generations starting in 1972 when my mother walked the parade route in a pioneer dress with Psi Iota Xi philanthropic sorority.
My first memory of walking in the parade was around 1981 when I marched with my junior high school band from Columbus. In 1997, I moved back home to Brown County and brought my husband, Jim, with me. Every four years, when he ran for local office, we walked the parade route with