4 comments

Comment from: JC in VA [Visitor]
There is no official Presidents Day. It's still "Washington's Birthday." You can check section 6103(a) of title 5 of the United States Code.

In Virginia we have an additional state holiday. Guess which two men are honored on the 3rd Friday in January?
02 May 2008 @ 13:39
Comment from: ericasp [Member] Email
Hmmm... I guess I must be a Yankee :-) My initial guess was that it was Thomas Jefferson and then maybe James Madison or James Monroe. I had to look it up on Wikipedia to discover that it is in fact Robert E. Lee and Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson who are celebrated on Lee-Jackson Day on the 3rd Friday in January.
02 May 2008 @ 15:34
Comment from: JC in VA [Visitor] · http://www.monticello.org/
Mr. Jefferson is still revered here in VA. I guess his holiday is July 4, the anniversary of his death.
02 May 2008 @ 15:59
Comment from: Amarys [Visitor]
From a European point of view, I'd say it's due to the fact that the Catholic church is/was predominant here for so long. All these holidays would be days when the Church holds special services, retreats, rites, etc. On the other hand, it looks like, by the examples you give (but I don't know anything about it), that American holidays are linked to the creation of a new State and the elaboration of a new common History and memory; and by the celebration of individual figures, they belong to the individualistic tendency of Protestant culture more than Cath.
But hey!, In most of Europe, 1st of May is also Labor Day, a very secular holiday, with socialist/communistic origins. Not very religious anymore...
03 May 2008 @ 14:13

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