Labor Day is a federal holiday in the United States celebrated on the first Monday in September to honor and recognize the American labor movement and the works and contributions of laborers to the development and achievements of the United States.
Beginning in the late 19th century, as the trade union and
labor movements grew, trade unionists proposed that a day be set aside to
celebrate labor. "Labor Day"
was promoted by the Central Labor Union
and the Knights of Labor, which organized the first parade in New York City. In 1887, Oregon was the first state of the United States to make it an official
public holiday. By the time it became an official federal holiday in 1894;
thirty states in the U.S. officially celebrated Labor Day.
Canada's Labor Day
is also celebrated on the first Monday of
September. More than 80 other countries celebrate International Workers' Day on May 1, the European holiday of May Day. May Day was chosen by the
Second International of socialist and communist parties to commemorate the
general labor strike in the United
States and events leading to the Haymarket
affair, which occurred in Chicago from
May 1 – May 4, 1886.
History
Origin
P. J. McGuire, Vice
President of the American Federation of Labor, is frequently credited as
the father of Labor Day in the United States.
Beginning in the late 19th century, as the trade union and
labor movements grew; diverse groups of trade unionists chose a variety of days
on which to celebrate labor. In the United
States, a September holiday called Labor
Day was first proposed in the early 1880s.
Alternative accounts of the event's origin exist.
Descendants of two men with similar last names claim their great-grandfather
was the true father of the holiday.
According to one early history of Labor Day, the event originated in connection with a General Assembly of the Knights of Labor
convened in New York City in September 1882. In connection with this
clandestine Knights assembly, a public parade of various labor organizations
was held on September 5 under the auspices of the Central Labor Union (CLU) of New York. Secretary of the CLU Matthew Maguire is credited for proposing that a national Labor Day
holiday subsequently be held on the first Monday
of each September in the aftermath of this successful public demonstration.
An alternative theory maintains that the idea of Labor Day was the brainchild of Peter J. McGuire, a vice president of
the American Federation of Labor,
who, after a visit to Toronto where he saw parades celebrating labor that May,
had put forward the initial proposal in the spring of 1882. According to
McGuire, on May 8, 1882, he made a proposition to the fledgling Central Labor Union in New York City
that a day be set aside for a "general
holiday for the laboring classes". According to McGuire he further
recommended that the event should begin with a street parade as a public
demonstration of organized labor's solidarity and strength, with the march
followed by a picnic, to which participating local unions could sell tickets as
a fundraiser. According to McGuire he suggested the first Monday in September
as an ideal date for such a public celebration, owing to optimum weather and
the date's place on the calendar, sitting midway between the Fourth of July and Thanksgiving public holidays.
Labor Day picnics
and other public gatherings frequently featured speeches by prominent labor leaders.
In 1909, the American
Federation of Labor convention designated the Sunday preceding Labor Day
as "Labor Sunday", to be
dedicated to the spiritual and educational aspects of the labor movement. This
secondary date failed to gain significant traction in popular culture, although
some churches continue to acknowledge it.
Legal recognition
The popularity of the event spread across the country. In
1887, Oregon became the first state
of the United States to make Labor Day an official public holiday.
By 1894, thirty U.S. states were already officially celebrating Labor Day. In that year, Congress
passed a bill recognizing the first
Monday of September as Labor Day
and making it an official federal holiday. President
Grover Cleveland signed the bill into law on June 28. The federal law,
however, only made it a holiday for federal workers. As late as the 1930s,
unions were encouraging workers to strike to make sure they got the day off.
All U.S. states, the District of
Columbia, and the United States
territories have subsequently made Labor
Day a statutory holiday. Labor Day
became a federal holiday shortly after the Pullman
Strike.
Labor Day versus May
Day
The date of May 1 (an ancient European folk holiday known as
May Day) emerged in 1886 as an
alternative holiday for the celebration of labor, later becoming known as International Workers' Day. The date
had its origins at the 1885 convention of the American Federation of Labor, which passed a resolution calling for the adoption of the eight-hour day effective May 1, 1886. While negotiation was
envisioned for the achievement of the shortened work day, the use of the strike to
enforce this demand was recognized, with May 1 advocated as a date for
coordinated strike action. The proximity of the date to the bloody Haymarket affair of May 4, 1886,
further accentuated May First's
radical reputation.
There was disagreement among labor unions at this time about
when a holiday celebrating workers should be, with some advocating for
continued emphasis on the September march-and-picnic date while others sought
the designation of the more politically charged date of May 1. Conservative
Democratic President Grover Cleveland was one of those concerned that a
labor holiday on May 1 would tend to become a commemoration of the Haymarket
affair and would strengthen socialist and anarchist movements that backed the
May 1 commemoration around the globe. In 1887, he publicly supported the
September Labor Day holiday as a less
inflammatory alternative, formally adopting the date as a United States federal holiday through a law that he signed in 1894.
Since the mid-1950s, the United States has celebrated Loyalty
Day and Law Day on May 1. Unlike
Labor Day, neither is legal public
holidays (in that government agencies and most businesses do not shut down to
celebrate them) and therefore has remained relatively obscure. Loyalty Day is formally celebrated in a
few cities, while some bar associations hold Law Day events to celebrate the rule of law.
Unofficial end of
summer
Labor Day is
called the "unofficial end of
summer" because it marks the end of the cultural summer season. Many
take their two-week vacations during the two weeks ending Labor Day weekend. Many fall activities, such as school and sports
(particularly football), begin about this time.
In the United States,
many school districts resume classes around the Labor Day holiday weekend. Some begin the week before, making Labor Day weekend the first three-day
weekend of the school calendar, while others return the Tuesday following Labor Day.
Many districts across the Midwest
are opting to begin school after Labor
Day.
In the U.S. state of Virginia,
the amusement park industry has successfully lobbied for legislation requiring
most school districts in the state to have their first day of school after Labor Day, to give families
another weekend to visit amusement parks in the state. The relevant statute has
been nicknamed the "Kings Dominion
law" after one such park. This law was repealed in 2019.
In the U.S. state of Minnesota,
the State Fair ends on Labor Day. Under state law, public
schools normally do not begin until after the holiday. One reason given for
this timing was to allow time for schoolchildren to show 4-H projects at the
Fair.
In U.S. sports, Labor
Day weekend marks the beginning of many fall sports. National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) teams usually play
their first games that weekend and the National
Football League (NFL) traditionally plays their kickoff game the Thursday following Labor Day. The Southern 500
NASCAR auto race has been held on Labor
Day weekend at Darlington Raceway
in Darlington, South Carolina from 1950
to 2003 and since 2015. At Indianapolis
Raceway Park, the National Hot Rod
Association holds its finals of the NHRA
U.S. Nationals drag race that weekend. Labor
Day is the middle point between weeks one and two of the U.S. Open Tennis Championships held in Flushing Meadows, New York.
In fashion, Labor Day
is (or was) considered the last day when it is acceptable to wear white or
seersucker.
There are numerous events and activities organized in major
cities. For example, New York offers
the Labor Day Carnival and fireworks
over Coney Island. In Washington, one popular event is the Labor Day Concert at the U.S. Capitol featuring the National Symphony Orchestra with free
attendance.
Labor Day sales
To take advantage of large numbers of potential customers
with time to shop, Labor Day has
become an important weekend for discounts and allowances by many retailers in
the United States, especially for
back-to-school sales. Some retailers claim it is one of the largest sale dates
of the year, second only to the Christmas
season's Black Friday.
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