ALEXANDRIA
St. Patrick's Day Gets An Early Green Light
Edward Snyder plays during Alexandria's parade with the Northern Virginia Firefighters' Emerald Society Pipe Band, which will also march in the District.
(By Susan Biddle -- The Washington Post)
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Sunday, March 4, 2007
In Alexandria, the early bird gets the bagpiper, or something like that.
The city held its annual St. Patrick's Day Parade yesterday, the first in the nation (by an hour) and a full two weeks before the holiday for the patron saint of Ireland.
The parade was blessed with sun, a good crowd and, yes, plenty of bagpipers.
But why so early? Isn't it like opening Christmas presents Dec. 11?
Credit for the brilliant -- or quizzical -- timing goes to parade chairman Pat Troy, who organized the city's first version of the parade 26 years ago.
Troy was inspired to start a St. Patrick's parade after watching the city's annual Christmas Walk. The inaugural parade in 1981 featured one pipe band, the City of Alexandria Pipes and Drums, which marched five blocks down King Street.
To make the parade seem more substantial, Troy had the pipe band go back to the starting point after those five blocks and march again.
"I'll try every trick," said Troy, 65, a vision of heartiness in his red-white-and-green sash, shock of white hair and piercing smile. Troy is a restaurateur/shopkeeper/radio host and enthusiastic emcee of the annual parade, which now spans 13 blocks and boasts many pipe bands, none of which has to march twice.
As for being the first in the nation, according to organizers and SaintPatricksDayParade.com, which lists parades around the world, that's another story, Troy said. It's all about talent and timing.
New York has a lock on the actual St. Patrick's Day, so that's out. The District's parade is the weekend before the holiday, so Alexandria takes its turn two weeks early.
"We want them to come out and enjoy ours," Troy said, "and we want to enjoy theirs.''
Other parades yesterday in New Jersey and Queens, N.Y., were scheduled to kick off at 1 p.m. Alexandria's began at noon.

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