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Calender with a list of American
national holidays
The United States celebrates ten national holidays during which most federal
institutions are closed.
Since 1971, a number of these have been fixed on Mondays rather than on a
particular calendar date so as to afford workers a long holiday weekend.
These holidays are the favorite
holidays for obvious reasons
1. New Year’s Day (January 1)
2. Birthday of Martin Luther King, Jr. (third Monday in January)
On November 2, 1983, President Ronald Reagan signed legislation establishing a
legal holiday honoring Martin Luther King, Jr. By 1999, all 50 states observed the
holiday.
3. Presidents’ Day (third Monday in February)
The February 22 birthday of George Washington, first president of the United
States, has been a legal holiday since 1885. As a number of states also
celebrated the February 12 birthday of Abraham Lincoln, the 16th president, some
legislators advocated combining the two events into a single holiday. Just like
meorial day and Independence day is Presidents day a A holiday related to
American revolution.
4. Memorial Day (last Monday in May)
Beginning after the 1861–65 Civil War, many states observed a May 30 holiday
(known as “Decoration Day”) honoring the lives lost in that conflict. After the First World War, these
ceremonies were expanded to include the nation’s war dead in every conflict. All
50 states observe the holiday in honor of those who died defending their nation.
5. Independence Day (July 4)
The Independence Day holiday commemorates the adoption of the Declaration of
Independence by the Second Continental Congress on July 4, 1776. The holiday was
already widely observed throughout the nation when Congress declared it a
federal legal holiday in 1870.
6. Labor Day (first Monday in September)
First observed in New York City in September 1882, the Labor Day holiday
commemorates the contributions of working men and women. In 1894, President
Grover Cleveland signed legislation establishing the federal holiday. Labor
union participation in annual parades remains common, while for many Americans
the holiday demarks the unofficial end of summer and beginning of the school
year.
7. Columbus Day (second Monday in October)
This holiday commemorates Christopher Columbus’s first landing in the Americas
on October 12, 1492. Beginning in the late 19th century, Italian-Americans began
to honor the day as a celebration of their heritage, as Columbus is widely
believed to be of Italian origin. In 1937, President Franklin D. Roosevelt
proclaimed the federal holiday.
8. Veterans Day (November 11)
The Veterans Day holiday is derived from Armistice Day, commemorating the end of
the First World War on November 11, 1918. Congress proclaimed a federal holiday
in 1938, and in 1954 changed the holiday’s name to Veterans Day in recognition
of those who served during the Second World War and the Korean conflict. Today
it recognizes all members of the armed forces, living and dead, who served
during times of peace or war. (Memorial Day, by contrast, honors those who gave
their lives.) While Veterans Day was among the holidays moved to Mondays
beginning in 1971, Congress in 1978 restored the holiday to its original
November 11 date. Among the annual ceremonies is one at the Tomb of the Unknowns
at Arlington National Cemetery near Washington.
9. Thanksgiving Day (fourth Thursday in November)
A variant of the harvest festivals celebrated in many parts of the world,
Thanksgiving is traced to a 1621 feast enjoyed by the English Pilgrims who
founded the Plymouth Colony (located in present day Massachusetts) and members
of the Wampanoag Indian tribe. In 1863, during the long and bloody civil war,
President Abraham Lincoln proclaimed the last Thursday in November “a day of
Thanksgiving and Praise.” Congress made Thanksgiving a legal federal holiday in
1941 and moved the holiday from the last Thursday in November to the fourth
Thursday, in hopes of stimulating the economy by lengthening (in some years) the
Christmas shopping season. The holiday is the occasion for a large and festive
meal, and for expressing thanks for that bounty.
10. Christmas Day (December 25)
Most Christians celebrate the birth of Jesus of Nazareth on December 25. Before
the 19th century, many Americans worked on Christmas, but in the industrial era
the holiday also began to honor universal values such as home, children and
family life, and to incorporate secular customs like exchanging gifts and cards,
and the decoration of evergreen trees. Congress proclaimed Christmas a federal
holiday in 1870. In 1999, a federal court acknowledged the secular aspects of
Christmas in rejecting a claim that the holiday impermissibly endorsed and
furthered a particular religious belief.
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