Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ohio giving Civil War Gen. Ulysses S. Grant his own day

- JULIE CARR SMYTH

COLUMBUS, Ohio — The president responsibl­e for giving America the federal Christmas holiday is getting a special day of his own.

Beginning next year, April 27 will be celebrated as Ulysses S. Grant Day in the iconic Civil War general’s home state of Ohio after legislatio­n creating the recognitio­n cleared the Legislatur­e on Dec. 14 and was signed by Republican Gov. Mike DeWine on Monday.

Grant was born on that date 200 years ago this past spring.

The home-state recognitio­n comes alongside congressio­nal action marking the 200th year of Grant’s birth, in 1822, with a posthumous military promotion to the U.S. Army’s highest rank: General of the Armies of the United States.

Authorizat­ion for the president to promote Grant — introduced by U.S. Sens. Sherrod Brown, a Democrat from Ohio, and Roy Blunt, a Missouri Republican — was contained in an $ 858 billion defense spending bill that became law in December.

The future leader’s boyhood home along the Ohio River in southern Ohio sits in the legislativ­e districts of state Sen. Terry Johnson and state Rep. Adam Bird, both Republican­s, who introduced companion day-naming bills.

“Personally, I believe Ulysses S. Grant is one of Ohio’s greatest native sons, and I think history is starting to look much differentl­y at his time as president,” Bird said in an interview.

Indeed, scholars in recent years have been reassessin­g Grant’s complicate­d legacy of battlefiel­d cruelty and personal slaveholdi­ng, with some now arguing for him to be considered America’s first civil rights president. They say he was a flawed leader who did what he could to protect freed slaves during Reconstruc­tion.

Bird said Grant’s home territory was “a hotbed of the Undergroun­d Railroad” when the future Union general and 18th U.S. president was young. Bird called Grant “a consequent­ial man in a consequent­ial place.”

Johnson said recognizin­g Grant was long overdue.

“President Grant left a legacy that few in history have ever seen,” he said in a statement on the bill’s passage.

That legacy includes the federal Christmas holiday, created in legislatio­n Grant signed as president in 1870. The move was viewed as a gesture to unify the South, where some states had already embraced the tradition, and the North, whose Puritan roots had generally deterred it.

Christmas remains the only federal holiday with a religious associatio­n, but efforts to remove it from the list for that reason have been unsuccessf­ul. A federal judge in Ohio rejected a constituti­onal challenge to the holiday in 1999, noting that people could spend the day off however they wished.

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