Presidents’ Day is an American holiday originally
established in 1885 in recognition of President George Washington and is
currently celebrated on the third Monday in February. The federal government still
officially calls it “Washington’s Birthday.” When first established, it was celebrated
on February 22—Washington’s actual day of birth.
The story of Presidents’ Day begins in 1800. Following
President George Washington’s death in 1799, his February 22 birthday became a
perennial day of remembrance. At the time, Washington was venerated as the most
important figure in American history, and events like the 1832 centennial of
his birth and the start of construction of the Washington Monument in 1848 were
cause for national celebration.
While Washington’s Birthday was an unofficial observance for
most of the 1800s, it was not until the late 1879 that it became a federal
holiday when President Rutherford B. Hayes signed it into law. The holiday
initially only applied to the District of Columbia, but in 1885 it was expanded
to the whole country.
The shift from Washington’s Birthday to Presidents’ Day
began in the late 1960s when Congress proposed a measure known as the Uniform
Monday Holiday Act. This law shifted the celebration of several federal
holidays from specific dates to a series of predetermined Mondays creating
three-day holiday weekends. While some argued that shifting holidays from their
original dates would cheapen their meaning, the bill had widespread support. The
Uniform Monday Holiday Act also included a provision to combine the celebration
of Washington’s Birthday with Abraham Lincoln’s, which fell on the proximate
date of February 12 thus giving equal recognition to two of America’s most
famous presidents.
The main piece of the Uniform Monday Holiday Act passed in
1968 and officially took effect in 1971 following an executive order from
President Richard Nixon. Washington’s Birthday was then shifted from the fixed
date of February 22 to the third Monday of February.
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