STOCKBRIDGE — In August 1937, Nantucket Fisherman's Bill Manville rushed to the offices of The Inquirer and Mirror to report a strange sea creature, about 100 feet long with a head like a barrel and ...
More than 3 million people will attend the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York this year as it winds its way along its 2½-mile route down Central Park West and Sixth Avenue to Herald Square, ...
(MEDIA GENERAL) — From Felix the Cat to Snoopy and SpongeBob, countless fictional icons have floated across some of America’s most popular roadways. But an American parade tradition actually started ...
Millions watch the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in person and on TV every year, yet few know about the multifaceted artist-entrepreneur behind the “upside down marionettes” that float down Broadway.
Tony Sarg and His Sea Monster, August 1937, Pivirotto Illustrator and puppeteer Tony Sarg is the subject of an on-going exhibit at the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, Mass. He planned an ...
More than 2,000 miles away from Manhattan’s Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, a group of eager elementary school kids are giving the New York City procession a run for its money. In the quaint city of ...
Eighty-seven years ago, a local artist perpetrated a spectacular prank on the residents of Nantucket, the Massachusetts island. The artist, Tony Sarg, was big in his day. Edgar B. Herwick III of ...
One August day in 1937, the national media descended on Nantucket, the tiny island off Cape Cod, Massachusetts. For weeks, newspapers had relayed sightings by fishermen of a giant sea monster, reports ...
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