On this date in 1868, the first parade to feature floats took place in Mobile, Alabama, to celebrate Mardi Gras. Here are 10 things you might not know about carnival floats.
A float is defined as a decorated platform, either built on a vehicle like a truck or towed behind one, which is a component of many festive parades.
They date back to the middle ages when they had religious themes. They were used as mobile scenery for passion plays, especially during Feast of Corpus Christi, which would feature 48 floats, one for each play in the Corpus Christi cycle. Artisans would build them to feature their particular skills.
Floats got their name because the very first ones were barges on the River Thames, decorated for the Lord Mayor's show.
In 1890 Pasadena's Valley Hunt Club organised a parade featuring Horse-drawn carriages covered in Flowers as part of a festival. This festival became known as the Tournament of Roses and it continues to this day.
In New Orleans, Mardi Gras was celebrated with small street processions until 1857 when a larger parade was organised. The first floats were simple, built on wooden wagons with paper, fabric, and gas lanterns. Like the passion play floats, they were designed to tell a story, as floats still do today. As people from Europe migrated to New Orleans, they brought skills with them and in time, the floats became more elaborate and artistic.
The largest float ever exhibited in a parade was 116-foot-long (35 m) and took part in the 2012 Tournament of Roses Parade. It featured a skateboarding Bulldog surfing in tank of water which held 5,500 imperial gallons (25,000 litres) of water, was 80 feet (24 m) long and included a wave machine which created a wave every minute.
When is a float not a float? When it’s a cart. In South West England there is a carnival parade in November connected with Guy Fawkes night. Floats here are known as carts and the parade takes place after dark. There are about 40 large floats which are illuminated with up to 22,000 lightbulbs. It tours various locations in Devon, Wiltshire and Somerset including Exmouth, Trowbridge, Bridgewater, Weston Super Mare and Glastonbury.
It can take several months to build a float. Once a theme has been decided upon the float will need a metal frame, hydraulic motors to make parts of it move, and the details added in wood, papier mache, fibre glass and clay. Costumes for the people riding on the float also have to be designed and made.
Themes of floats include children’s books and films, historical scenes, musical trends such as dance crazes or popular musicals, transport such as trains, cars and space travel and scenes from around the world.
In Ferris Bueller's Day Off, Ferris jumps onto a float during a parade and sings several karaoke numbers to the crowd.



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