Washington had planned a party for the ages. Instead, the nation’s capital spent its 250th birthday weekend fighting off heat exhaustion. More than 165 million people across the East Coast and Midwest baked under record temperatures on Friday, according to the National Weather Service, forcing organizers in multiple cities to scrap or delay events built around the Fourth of July.
The disruption hit hardest in Washington, where the Great American State Fair on the National Mall shut down for several hours after multiple attendees needed treatment for heat related illness. Fair organizers reopened the grounds by early evening once conditions eased, but not before DC Fire and EMS crews pulled at least 11 people out by ambulance.
A parade sacrificed to the heat
In Philadelphia, city officials called off the Salute to Independence Semiquincentennial Parade, one of the marquee events tied to the anniversary. Wawa Welcome America, the parade’s organizer, said hosting an event of that scale under such dangerous conditions was not something the group was willing to risk. Similar cancellations rippled outward to New Jersey, Maryland and even Colorado, where daytime festivities gave way to safety concerns.
Washington’s own morning parade was also scrapped after officials weighed the risk to participants, spectators and staff. Even the evening’s outdoor concert on the Capitol’s West Lawn was pushed back, with public entry delayed by four hours so crowds would spend less time exposed to peak temperatures.
Emergency crews stretched thin
City emergency services were already feeling the strain before the holiday weekend even began. Washington’s fire department logged a 20% jump in emergency calls earlier in the week, with medics responding to unconscious pedestrians, heat driven asthma attacks and other complications tied to the extreme conditions. Officials said crews had rehearsed for mass casualty scenarios and placed extra water and shade tents along routes where tens of thousands of visitors were expected to gather.
Despite the risks, President Trump proceeded with plans to speak outdoors at a Fourth of July celebration, telling reporters he intended to deliver a lengthy address regardless of the forecast. Fireworks organizers pushed back the National Mall’s entry time to limit how long attendees would stand in direct sun.
Heat records keep falling
New York City hit 100°F on Thursday, its hottest day in over a decade, and Mayor Zohran Mamdani warned residents that conditions had become genuinely dangerous. Philadelphia and Washington were both expected to approach their all time record highs, with heat index values climbing past 110°F in both cities.
Forecasters said the heat wave followed an unusually early and intense stretch of hot weather across Europe, part of a broader pattern scientists link to rising global temperatures. Parts of Canada, including southern Ontario, had already climbed into the mid 30s Celsius, or above 90°F, even before the weekend’s peak.
Meteorologists cautioned that Today could bring some relief to central states, but eastern regions were expected to remain dangerously hot through the holiday. Severe thunderstorms were also forecast for the northern Plains and Great Lakes, raising the possibility of hail, high winds and even isolated tornadoes as the heat finally broke.
By Sunday, forecasters expect the heat to shift south into Virginia and the Carolinas before building again in the western United States, extending a summer that has already tested how the country celebrates outdoors.

