Post Tribune (Sunday)

The meaning of 12 federal holidays

They reflect how the US has evolved to a centralize­d nation

- Associated Press

By Hillel Italie

NEW YORK — On July 4, 1776, the Continenta­l Congress formally endorsed the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce. Celebratio­ns began within days: parades and public readings, bonfires and candles and the firing of 13 musket rounds, one for each of the original states.

Nearly a century passed before the country officially named its founding a holiday.

With the recent passage of the Juneteenth National Independen­ce Day Act, commemorat­ing the end of slavery in the United States, the country now has 12 federal holidays. Many are fixtures in the calendar, but their presence isn’t only a story of continuity. They reflect how the U.S. has evolved — from an affiliatio­n of states with a relatively small federal government to a more centralize­d nation.

Statewide and local gatherings for Independen­ce Day and other holidays are as old as the country itself. But the first round of federal holidays, identified as such because federal employees (initially only federal employees in Washington) were given the day off, was only signed into law in 1870, by President Ulysses S. Grant, five years after the Civil War ended.

“The Civil War consolidat­ed national power in all sorts of ways, and national holidays are an illustrati­on of that,” says the Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Eric Foner. “There were many, many firsts after the Civil War.”

Juneteenth and other federal holidays have passed with substantia­l majorities in Congress, suggesting broad, bipartisan consensus. The first holidays, notes Grant biographer Ron Chernow, were the safest ones at the time — New Year’s Day, Independen­ce Day, Thanksgivi­ng, Christmas and George Washington’s birthday (enacted in 1879).

“They followed the Civil War, but, by no accident, they had nothing to do with the Civil War. The war wounds were still deep and irrevocabl­e, and any commemorat­ion of the war itself would have been seen as divisive,” Chernow says.

He notes that Memorial Day, the honoring of those who died in war, did not become a federal holiday until 1888.

“The first five federal holidays ... attempted to restore common ground between North and South,” Chernow says. “Both sides in the Civil War claimed to have fought in the spirit of the American Revolution. It was therefore easy for both sides to honor Washington’s birthday and Independen­ce Day.”

Whether statements of patriotism or social justice, federal holidays mirror a part of the country’s sense of itself and how it changes.

Public support to make the Rev. Martin Luther King’s birthday a holiday was so strong that it was signed into law in 1983 by President Ronald Reagan, who had opposed the Civil Rights Act and Voting Rights Act in the 1960s and privately believed the late civil rights leader’s standing was “based on an image, not reality.”

Even then, Arizona, New Hampshire and South Carolina resisted making it a state holiday, with South Carolina waiting until 2000. Alabama and Mississipp­i still pair King’s birthday with the birthday of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee.

Columbus Day became a national holiday in 1968, endorsed by Congress and President Lyndon Johnson as a tribute to immigrants and as a “declaratio­n of willingnes­s to face with confidence the imponderab­les of unknown tomorrows,” according to a Senate report at the time.

But over the past 40 years, as Columbus’ image has shifted from the “discoverer of America” to that of a racist and imperialis­t, cities and states have either changed the holiday’s name or used the day to honor others; since 1989, South Dakota has called it “Native American Day.”

“You can think of federal holidays as being like monuments erected in parks,” says Matthew Dennis, author of “Red, White, and Blue Letter Days,” a 2002 book on American holidays. “With a monument, you try to set the meaning of the past in stone. But that can change, and people might say, ‘Wait, who is this guy?’ ”

Among national holidays, July 4 stands as the most complex and debated, a reflection of the questions and contradict­ions about the country’s origins and about the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce itself.

Independen­ce Day has been caught up in the country’s divisions almost from the start.

In the 1780s and 1790s, supporters of a stronger central government (Federalist­s) and those who worried about a return to British-style monarchy (sometimes called Jeffersoni­an Republican­s), argued over the authorship of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, with Republican­s giving sole credit to their own Thomas Jefferson and Federalist­s countering (correctly) that many others had worked on it.

In the decades before the Civil War, Black Americans were often excluded from official July 4 events and instead would celebrate July 5, both acknowledg­ing July 4 and their distance from it. Frederick Douglass delivered his famed 1852 speech, “What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July,” on July 5.

The Civil War itself was a time for competing interpreta­tions. Southerner­s embraced the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce’s message of defiance against tyranny. The North looked to it as a blueprint. In a letter to Congress sent July 4, 1861, just months after the Civil War began, President Abraham Lincoln spoke of Independen­ce Day as inspiratio­n for a new and more humane society.

“Our adversarie­s have adopted some declaratio­ns of independen­ce in which, unlike the good old one penned by Jefferson, they omit the words ‘all men are created equal,’ ” Lincoln wrote, adding that the Union was upholding “government whose leading object is to elevate the condition of men; to lift artificial weights from all shoulders; to clear the paths of laudable pursuit for all; to afford all an unfettered start and a fair chance in the race of life.”

The meaning of July 4 has continued to evolve from president to president.

Franklin D. Roosevelt and George W. Bush are among those who dedicated Independen­ce Day speeches to the military, whether during World War II or in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks. John F. Kennedy’s 1962 address, in the midst of the Cold War, called independen­ce the “single issue that divides the world today” and invoked “the longing for independen­ce behind the Iron Curtain.”

In 2014, President Barack Obama cited the promise of “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” as a reason “immigrants from around the world dream of coming to our shores.”

For Independen­ce Day in 2020, less than two months after the murder of George Floyd, President Donald Trump denounced Black Lives Matters protesters and what he called “a merciless campaign to wipe out our history, defame our heroes, erase our values and indoctrina­te our children.”

 ??  ?? President Biden makes Juneteenth the latest national holiday last month at the White House.
President Biden makes Juneteenth the latest national holiday last month at the White House.

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