1919 - Red Cross Nurses
The 1919 graduating class of Red Cross Nurses march in the Mecklenburg Declaration Parade on May 20th. The photograph was taken in the first block of South Tryon Street. The Independence Building is in the background.
The 1919 graduating class of Red Cross Nurses march in the Mecklenburg Declaration Parade on May 20th. The photograph was taken in the first block of South Tryon Street. The Independence Building is in the background.
U. S. President Woodrow Wilson (center, in top hat) appears in this Moon photograph with many Charlotteans, Gov. Manning of South Carolina, Gov. Craig of North Carolina and Charlotte Mayor Kirkpatrick for Meck Dec celebrations in 1916.
The program for this occasion featured an illustration in color on the cover.
Mecklenburg women expressed their desire to be free to vote on this Meck Dec parade float in 1914. It would take another five years for Congress to pass the 19th Amendment. The suffrage movement took 61 years before women won the right to vote.
The Daughters of the Revolution participated with this elaborate float in 1914.
Charlotte merchants loved Meck Dec celebrations. Throngs of people came from hundreds and thousands of miles to participate. Ivey`s Department Store, a local retailer, participated with this float in the 1914 parade.
Charlotteans continue to revel in their independence from the Crown. This copy of a portrait, "Her Excellent Majesty, Charlotte, Queen of Great Britain," was given to the Charlotte mayor by Archibald Henderson for Meck Dec Day circa 1914.
Badge from 1914 showing membership in the Mecklenburg Declaration Society, Inc., Charlotte, NC.
This Meck Dec float (circa 1913) shows some originality as it passes through the streets covered in greenery.
An Automobile Parade and a race at the fairgrounds were the highlights of the 1910 celebration. The Charlotte News, May 20, 1910.
In 1909, William Howard Taft, the newly-elected president of the United States, visited Charlotte on the 20th of May. He arrived by train and was driven into town through special arches erected on Trade and Tryon Streets to welcome him.
In the year following the publication of William Hoyt's skeptical 1907 study, The Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence, the Charlotte News printed this defiant cartoon.
Mecklenburg Declaration activites were once celebrated from May 21st through May 26th, according to this street banner. This postcard was sent in 1908 to Mr. John Linn of Rockwell, NC.