Start in Harlem ,
Nelson Rockefeller, and
Robert F. Wagner Jr. watch the 1959 Labor Day Parade|right
Jessie Waddell and some of her West Indian friends started the
Carnival in
Harlem in
Upper Manhattan, New York City, in the 1930s by staging
costume parties in large, enclosed places such as the
Savoy,
Renaissance and
Audubon Ballrooms due to the cold wintry weather of February. This is the usual time for the pre-
Lenten celebrations of the
Trinidad and Tobago Carnival and other related celebrations around the world. However, because of the very nature of Carnival, and the need to parade in costume to music, indoor confinement did not work well. The earliest known Carnival street parade was held on September 1, 1947. The
Trinidad Carnival Pageant Committee was the founding force behind the parade, which was held in Harlem. The parade route was along
Seventh Avenue, starting at 110th St. The first Carnival Queen was
Dorothy Godfrey. The Committee raised money to finance the parade. They sold advertisement space and boosters, that were printed in a Souvenir Journal for West Indies Day, a booklet which is a memento of that first parade. Jessie Waddell Compton is presented in the journal as the person "whose inspiration and enterprise" was owed to the formation of this committee. The committee consisted of Waddell Compton (Chairman),
Ivan H. Daniel (Vice Chairman),
Conrad Matthews (Treasurer),
Roy Huggins (Secretary),
and Robert J. Welsh (Assistant Secretary). Each member of the committee contributed in helping to organize the parade. The after-parade party, which the Trinidad Carnival Pageant Committee held at the
Golden Gate Ballroom, was arranged by
James M. Green, another figure who helped make the first Carnival Parade in Harlem successful.
Move to Crown Heights The permit for the Harlem parade was revoked in 1964. Five years later, a committee headed by Carlos Lezama, which eventually became the West Indian-American Day Carnival Association, obtained approval for the parade to be established on Eastern Parkway in Brooklyn, where it remains today. Throughout the 1970s groups of colorfully clad masqueraders (“mas bands”) “wined” (danced) down the Parkway to the music of Trinidad-style steel bands (
steelpan). Those steel bands were eventually replaced by powerful, truck-mounted sound systems that played a variety of Caribbean musics including
calypso,
soca (soul/calypso), reggae, and
compas. In 2020, the parade was cancelled due to COVID-19 by order of Mayor of New York
Bill de Blasio, who canceled all permits for large-scale events through September 2020. The parade was replaced by a
virtual event. While the parade did plan to return for 2021, on August 18 that year the WIADCA announced that the parade itself would once again be cancelled due to COVID-19 uncertainties, but that it would still hold a mix of in-person and streaming events, including several being held at the
Brooklyn Museum. ==In popular culture==