Houston, Texas, will hold its first Martin Luther King Jr. Unity Parade on Monday, January 20, 2025, in downtown Houston as two long-running MLK parades merge into a single citywide event that organizers say will honor Dr. King’s legacy through a unified route, message, and program.
City officials, parade organizers, community groups, and residents will gather near Smith and McKinney Streets, where the day’s activities will begin with an opening ceremony that will precede the formal start of the MLK Unity Parade.
The Black Heritage Society and the MLK Grande Parade organization, which previously produced separate annual events, have joined with the City of Houston to coordinate the new unified parade.
For decades, Houston hosted two major parades to honor Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and each event developed its own schedule, route, organizing committee, and base of supporters.
City leaders and organizers state that the merger of the two parades into one Unity Parade reflects the central theme of Dr. King’s work, which focused on unity across communities in the pursuit of equality and justice.
The parade will step off from Smith and Lamar Streets after the opening ceremony and will follow a designated route through downtown Houston that city officials have approved and publicized in advance.
More than 300 parade units will take part in the MLK Unity Parade, including high school and college marching bands, nonprofit organizations, community and neighborhood groups, cultural organizations, civic associations, and other invited participants.
Organizers estimate that the event could draw as many as 400,000 spectators along the downtown route, a turnout that would place the Unity Parade among the largest Martin Luther King Jr. Day celebrations in the city’s history.
Mayor John Whitmire will serve as one of three grand marshals for the first MLK Unity Parade, according to announcements from City Hall and parade organizers.
Charles White of the MLK Grande Parade organization will also serve as a grand marshal, along with Houston radio personality Madd Hatta, who has a longstanding presence in local media and community events.
The Black Heritage Society has historically organized one of Houston’s MLK parades, tracing its involvement in King-related observances back several decades in the region.