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Labor Day
Labor
Day respects working people of all kinds and their different jobs.
People in the US, Puerto Rico and Canada celebrate it on the first
Monday in September. Labor Day means that the summer season has ended.
The
history of Labor Day starts in the 1700’s. At that time factories made
many products cheaper and faster that those made at home by
hand. People quickly learned that work in factories was different from
work at home. They worked for longer hours. Many factories were
dirty and unsafe. Even young children worked in factories. Many
factory workers wanted to improve the place where they worked.
Thus in the 1800’s they created groups of workers called unions.
The
idea of a holiday for workers developed slowly. Two factory workers,
Matthew Maguire from Paterson, NJ, and Peter J. McGuire from New York City,
organized the first workers’ day parade in New York
City in September 1882. In later years, more working people
liked the idea of a holiday that recognized them and their work. They wanted the
government to call
it “Labor Day.” In 1887 Oregon became the first state
to make Labor Day an official holiday. One by one
other states made the same holiday for their workers.
However,
Labor Day was not yet a national holiday. In 1894 workers for the Pullman
Railroad Company stopped working. The company did not agree to improvements the
workers wanted. This is called a strike against the company. It caused many
problems for people around the country. One problem was that some US mail was
not being delivered. Then a court ruled that the workers must return to work.
President Grover Cleveland then sent soldiers to help stop the strike. Many
Americans agreed with the President, but people in unions were angry with him.
Therefore he made Labor Day a national holiday in the US to help make peace with
the workers.
Today
some unions have Labor Day activities, but there is no national custom for this
holiday. Since Labor Day is on a Monday, it makes a three-day-weekend. Since
this weekend comes at the end of summer, many Americans go on a short trip and
go camping, fishing, or visiting other parts of the country. Others have
picnics, play sports and games, or do other outdoor activities.
Sometimes
you may hear Americans speak badly about their jobs, but most are probably glad
to have their jobs. They know their paycheck provides the money they need to
have a comfortable life.
Many
American holidays and customs come from traditions in the Bible. The idea of a
weekend is one example. In the Bible God made one day a week to be a day of
rest. For Jews that day is Saturday; for Christians it is Sunday. Most people
from these faiths try not to work on these two days. They attend church services
and worship God and rest. That is how the weekend in America began. Labor Day
gives one day off from work each year; the weekend gives one day off each week.
Home
American Holidays
© From "A Look Inside America" by Bill Perry. To buy this book, call Multi-Language Media at 717.738.0582
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