Celebrating Freedom

4july

By Mike Ellis

Thousands of area residents watched the return of the Hinsdale Fourth of July parade a day early on July 3. Until late this spring, the fate of the parade was uncertain, as the state only progressed to Phase 5 of the “Restore Illinois” plan last month. The parade consisted largely of familiar acts and faces, including Hinsdale village president Tom Cauley, Burr Ridge mayor Gary Grasso and DuPage County board member Greg Hart. The Hinsdale Central marching band and color guard delivered their first parade performance in nearly two years, followed by the Central and Hinsdale Falcons cheerleaders. The Medinah Shriners and trick bicyclists bedazzled spectators with their entertaining maneuvers and daring stunts, while Civil War re-enactors returned to startle the crowd with their buzzing cannon. Although the parade contained little of novelty, the environment felt fresh nevertheless, with families, friends and neighbors elated at the chance to gather again on the Fourth of July.

*Photo by Mike Ellis

Author

Oakbrook-Center-fountain-at-night

Comfort & Joy: Shopping This Holiday Season In Oak Brook, and elsewhere in DuPage

Rev. Dr. Dan Meyer - lead pastor at Christ Church

Young Life: Raising money for faith-filled youth programs

8W1A5808ext

Crushing It: Downers Grove native, Chrishon Lampley, celebrates her successful wine label’s first decade

CHAMBER-PRES-BECKY

Community Scene: Westmont Chamber of Commerce

Oktoberfest

AWE Autumn

IMG_3108cced-e1694207643341

David Rokos: A local musician’s new album makes a smooth landing

Lore-at-Cubs-Game-e1694207448368

Lore Swieca: Celebrating the turn of a century at the friendly confines

FD-37

In the Spotlight: The Downers Grove Fire Department and its recent field-based training opportunity

DG-Logo-Black

Behind the Scenes: Meet the Downers Grove Magazine Team

Cadence Kitchen

Milestones: Downers Grove businesses celebrate landmark anniversaries

IMG-7438alt

Bringing Visibility to Vincibility

2W0A0458

In Bed By Ten: A new early-night show offers Chicago-quality comedy that is relatable and accessible to suburban audiences