Presidents' Day History, Folklore, and More
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Thanks for President Washington’s Birthday fun facts. Thoroughly enjoyed it. It let me wandering though, since his teeth were not made of wood, whether his famous terrible breath was for real or just a fable
Mountain every been rebuild
I also remember celebrating on two different days in February to honor George Washington and Abraham Lincoln. We were also taught in school the value of why we honored those specific two Presidents and the impact they’re Presidency made on our country. In the 90’s it was changed to Presidents Day thereby blending the two honored Presidents with all presidents….losing the value of their standout contribution. Our calendar went through quiet a few changes during that era….including the dates of Daylight Savings Time. You won’t read about this….but many of us lived it.
I have recently read several articles, memes, etc., indicating Presidents' Day is for Washington's birthday. We used to have 2 national holidays in the short month of February; Lincoln's birthday on the 12th and Washington's on the 22nd. The consolidation was to combine the holiday, celebrating BOTH of their birthdays. Why had everyone forgotten about old Abe?
It is certainly a convoluted topic!
- Washington’s Birthday is the federal holiday; the United States Code, Title 5, Section 6103, lists “Washington’s Birthday” as a legal public holiday, observed on the third Monday of February. It is also the official name for some state holidays on the third Monday in February.
- Lincoln’s birthday was never celebrated at the federal level, but is at the state level in certain states, such as Illinois and Connecticut.
- Presidents’ Day is an official state holiday in certain states, such as Pennsylvania and California (although the location of the apostrophe varies — President’s Day or Presidents’ Day or Presidents Day.)
In 1968, Rep. Robert McClory attempted to change “Washington’s Birthday” to “Presidents’ Day,” but the idea wasn’t accepted. The observance was, however, changed to the third Monday in February as part of the Uniform Monday Holiday Bill. This bill moved the observance of Washington’s birthday from February 22 to the third Monday in February, starting in 1971. Because of this, many thought that the newly moved holiday was to honor both presidents, or all presidents. Some states even changed the name to Presidents’ Day. “Presidents’ Day” was picked up by retailers as well, and it became a widely accepted name due in part because the date was so close to both Lincoln’s and Washington’s actual birthdays.
Lincoln’s birthday was never a holiday at the federal level, but several states did, and still do, celebrate it. When new holidays were introduced at the federal level, some states moved to remove Lincoln’s birthday from the list of state observances in favor of others, or combined it with Washington’s birthday on the third Monday in February (usually renaming it Presidents’ Day), or some other combination.
Because the federal and state level of holiday observances can vary, it has led to much confusion!
Missing from the article is that fact that my father, Harold S. Fischer, was the founder and National Director of the President's Day National Committee from 1951 to 1972. He attempted to have President's Day as a National Holiday on March 4th, the original inauguration day, and a day when school children would study the Office of the Presidency. It was never accepted by Congress as they felt that it would be a third holiday, close on the heels of Lincoln's Birthday and Washington's Birthday. However, Governors of states around the country would issue proclamations, proclaiming March 4th as President's Day in their jurisdiction.
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I have read the farmers almanac since I began to read as our family (great-grandparents, grandparents and parents) always bought it.
Because it was such a valued reference manual it always was around. I even used to look at the illustrations before I could read :).
It was a happy topic of conversations around the kitchen table and while in the garden.
When I grew to be on my own in life, I used to buy it whenever I could find it.
Now I live in a remote location and we have no newsstands here.
I have really missed it and still have a few older copies that I keep with my other reference materials.
I am just so delighted to have found you again and especially that you are still carrying on as all ways. I will be making one of your cherry recipes to honor our traditions over the next few days.
Thank you for always being a bright light and inspiration in my life.
Kind Regards,
Sunne
Four days after the assassination of The Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. (1968), legislation was introduced to make MLK Jr. Day a federal holiday. However, it took 15 years before legislation was passed (1983). Then, it was another three years before the legislation and MLK Jr. Day were in effect (1986).
By merging the Lincoln and Washington birthday celebration into one holiday it made room in the federal calendar to add Martin Luther King day without impacting the work time in labor contracts and other employment agreements.
This gets more complicated because later many companies offered people either the Columbus Holiday or MLK holiday at an option, but not both.
Lastly the Federal Holidays only impact federal workers and federal facilities. The holidays are actually established by the individual states. This also impacted the roll out of MLK day.
It's not called Presidents Day simply because it is Washington's birthday...its a combination of both Lincolns birthday & Washington's birthday to do away with the 2 separate days we used to celebrate to make it on the 3rd Monday for the 3 day weekend designated by the bill in 1968 that changed several holidays to be 3 day weekend holidays, including my birthday...Memorial Day).
Christine, you did not read the ĂŰĚŇÁµČË article, where it says the U.S. Code designates the 3rd Monday in February as Washington's Birthday. I also have thought the day is an observance of both Lincoln and Washington's birthdays but we are wrong.