Marine Barracks Washington, D.C. Friday Evening Parade

Event Date: Friday, May 24, 2024 8:45 p.m. – 10:00 p.m.

Location: Marine Barracks, Washington, DC. Meet at 7PM at Marine Barracks, Corner of 8th and I Street SE.

Price: No charge – free to the general public – but you must make reservations.

Run For The Wall® has arranged for a block of tickets. For those interested in attending with the RFTW Group, please email your first and last name as well as the names of any guests accompanying you to Doug Lyvere: doug@lyvere.com. Doug will confirm your request via return email. On the evening of the event, please plan to arrive at the corner of 8th and I Streets SE no later than 1900 hours (7:00 PM).

As a security precaution, ALL guests entering the Barracks pass through metal detection devices. NO WEAPONS OF ANY KIND, including knives, are allowed inside the Barracks. No food or beverages are permitted with the exception of water and baby food/bottles.

For those who wish to attend independently from the RFTW group, please contact Marine Barracks directly for reservations/tickets.

Reservations: Email Doug@Lyvere.com with your name and the names of any guests.

Attendance at this parade is a one-of-a-kind experience. For more than 60 years, the “Oldest Post of the Corps” has displayed the pride, professionalism, and esprit de corps of Marines throughout the world.

Guests will see the finest in military excellence including performances by “The President’s Own” United States Marine Band, “The Commandant’s Own” United States Marine Drum and Bugle Corps, and the esteemed United States Marine Corps Silent Drill Platoon. Following the ceremony, our guests will have the opportunity to meet Marines who performed throughout the parade as well as take photographs with the Marine Barracks mascot, Chesty XVI.

History of the Evening Parade

The “Oldest Post of the Corps,” was established in 1801, and has performed military reviews and ceremonies since its founding. The present-day Evening Parade was first conducted on July 5, 1957.

The presidential inaugurations and specific occasions prompted the parades and ceremonies conducted at the Barracks during the early 1900s. The traditional reveille and morning muster parades were conducted with varying frequency at the post, and they eventually resulted in more formalized ceremonies. In 1934, when MajGen. John H. Russell, Jr. was the 16th Commandant of the Marine Corps, the Barracks initiated its first season of regularly scheduled weekly parades. The parades were conducted in the late afternoon, usually on Mondays or Thursdays and varied from 4 to 5:30 p.m. The parades were commonly referred to as “Sunset Parades.” The ceremonies were conducted from April to November, concluding the week of the Marine Corps Birthday, November 10.

The basic format for today’s Evening Parade was similar to that envisioned and directed by Col. Emile P. Moses and Maj. Lemuel C. Shepherd Jr., Marine Barracks’ Commanding Officer and Executive Officer respectively, in 1934. Col. Moses and Maj. Shepherd (who later became the 20th Commandant of the Marine Corps), sighted the symmetry of the parade deck: Bordered on its long axis by graceful maple trees and shrubs fronting officer’s row and the barracks’ administrative offices, to the north of the picturesque home of the Commandant, and to the south the Marine Band Hall made famous by the immortal John Philip Sousa. They conceived a balanced pageant that would perfectly match the splendor of its old fashioned setting. The shadowy arcade was envisioned by Major Shepherd, “as wings to a stage, a runway from which Marines would march to their places on the parade deck.”

Using the resplendent setting of the Barracks, wistful imagination and the Marines’ flare for showmanship, the parades were to be a showcase for the ceremonial prowess of Marines and the musical eminence of the U.S. Marine Band, which had achieved international renown under the premier military band leader of all time, John Philip Sousa.

In planning the parade sequence and format, Colonel Leonard F. Chapman Jr., the future 24th Commandant of the Marine Corps, insisted that the parade adhere to strict regulations. The parade drill would be without fancy theatrics, which frequently characterized drill routines of that period. Since its inception, the Evening Parade has become a unique patriotic tradition of the “Oldest Post of the Corps”. The parade’s heritage is entwined with former military rituals such as tattoo, retreat, and lowering of the colors ceremonies. The Evening Parade is offered solely to express the dignity and pride that represents more than two centuries of heritage for all Americans.