When was the first ticker-tape parade?

And what do they use now that ticker-tape is dead and gone?

Charles Lindbergh, 1927.
Shredded paper, except that most office windows no longer open.

This site attributes it to the unveiling of the statue of liberty in 1886, with a quote from the New York times:

Wikipedia lists the first ticker-tape parade as happening in New York city, celebrating the Statue of Liberty, on October 29, 1886.

Now, most buildings don’t have openable windows, so people can’t throw paper out any more.

In San Francisco, the New Year’s Eve tradiion had been to throw out the desk calendar pages. That’s largely stopped as well, both due to a lack of suitable windows and because when the public works people found identifiable paper (memos “From the desk of…” and similar) they’d send it to that person along with a warning not to litter.

Wiki also has a list of New York’s parades - there’s been only one so far since 2000, and that was to celebrate the Yankees winning the World Series.

I was in that parade. There was no shortage of open windows to dump the shredded office paper out of. The mess was amazing and beautiful all at once.
The Parade formed up at Battery Park with Marching Bands from all over the Tri-State area. I was an adult chaperone with the Long Branch, NJ Band.

The buildings along the route are older and retained plenty of windows that opened. There was also paper coming down from some of the rooftops.

Jim

I’ll second Jim’s claim that NYC’s “Canyon of Heros” can host a tickertape parade with an impressive paper blizzard even in this age of sealed windows. I personally was at the Gulf War homecoming parade and a Yankee parade, and I was ankledeep in shredded memos, toilet paper, phone book pages, etc., etc. There are still plenty of old style buildings from the Battery to City Hall to get the job done.

Heck, even the older parts of downtown L.A. have lots of buildings with windows that open, though some of those are being converted into lofts. We went to look some of them, one day, and I was amazed that the windows opened completely and allowed full access to the…er…ground, very rapidly, and that the wall part below the windows barely came up past my knees, or about two feet.