The end of summer at Delaware’s beaches usually means empty lifeguard stands and shuttered seasonal shops. Bethany Beach is no exception, but when summer fades into fall in this Sussex County resort, it goes out with a resounding blast of Dixieland.
Now in its 25th year, the Bethany Beach Jazz Funeral is the town’s way of giving the summer a sendoff unlike anything else east of New Orleans. This year, the Jazz Funeral will be held Labor Day Monday, Sept. 6.
Here are a few reasons why a Delaware town takes on the spirit of The Big Easy, and what summer’s mourners can expect.
1. A pretty lively procession, considering it’s a funeral.
Jazz funerals in New Orleans are a long held tradition, and Bethany’s town fathers felt holding a funeral procession yet making a party out of the occasion was a good way to bid farewell not only to the warm weather, but to the tourists who flock to Bethany each year.
Two of the year’s biggest events are the Fourth of July and the jazz funeral. The latter got its start around 1980 over a bottle of champagne at the ice cream parlor owned by town businessman Moss Wagner. The champagne party grew over the following five years until Wagner got the idea of emulating the way people in New Orleans send their loved ones off into eternity.
In 1985, the celebration was formalized as a way for Bethany Beachers to celebrate the exodus of summer tourists and the opportunity to downshift their lives a bit as their town returned to a slower pace.
2. Outstanding jazz music, both somber and lively.
Back in the beginning, members of the band that played for the Fourth of July festivities were available at the end of the season to form a New Orleans style jazz band. In the tradition of a New Orleans funeral, townspeople built a coffin out of plywood, painted it black and stuffed it with a mannequin representing the summer season.
Now, as then, they’ll slowly parade the casket through Bethany’s streets while the musicians play somber music.
The occasion takes a 180-degree turn once the procession reaches its end at the town bandstand. The coffin rests in a place of honor and speeches, some serious, some tongue-in-cheek, are given, “Taps” is played, and the coffin is given a ceremonial interment.
Suddenly, the town explodes into what only can be described as a big party. The musicians drop their gloomy demeanor and break out into a raucous musical tribute. Visitors are invited to dance or sing along with the band and to drop in at Bethany’s shops and stores to take part in end of summer sales.