Overwhelming American Population Observe Presidents’ Day

IMAGE DISTRIBUTED FOR PARAMOUNT MIAMI WORLDCENTER - The world's tallest L.E.D. "Happy Presidents' Day" greeting lights-up the 60-story Paramount Miami Worldcenter in observance of the 29th annual holiday honoring America's 46 commanders-in-chief. The $600-million, 700-foot-tall Paramount Miami tower features the world's largest electronic stars and stripes salute, paired with 300-foot by 100-foot mammoth digital busts of Presidents Washington and Lincoln and an animated image of Uncle Sam ignite "Magic City" skyline on February 20, 2022 in downtown Miami. (Eva Marie Uzcategui/AP Images for Paramount Miami Worldcenter)

IMAGE DISTRIBUTED FOR PARAMOUNT MIAMI WORLDCENTER – The world’s tallest L.E.D. “Happy Presidents’ Day” greeting lights-up the 60-story Paramount Miami Worldcenter in observance of the 29th annual holiday honoring America’s 46 commanders-in-chief. The $600-million, 700-foot-tall Paramount Miami tower features the world’s largest electronic stars and stripes salute, paired with 300-foot by 100-foot mammoth digital busts of Presidents Washington and Lincoln and an animated image of Uncle Sam ignite “Magic City” skyline on February 20, 2022 in downtown Miami. (Eva Marie Uzcategui/AP Images for Paramount Miami Worldcenter)

The nation observes President’s Day on February 20. The history of George Washington’s birthday, much like the nation, goes back hundreds of years and has a complex history.

The holiday has its roots in the late 1870s when Arkansas Sen. Steven Wallace Dorsey, a Republican, proposed making George Washington’s birthday a bank holiday. The bill was a popular one and was signed into law by then-President Rutherford B. Hayes on January 31 1879.

President’s Day became the first federal holiday to recognize an individual’s birth date, which was an honor held until Martin Luther King Jr. Day was instituted. It was also the only holiday other than Christmas to be celebrated by every single state.

However, the holiday, which fell on Washington’s birthday of February 22, did not remain untouched. In 1968, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the uniform holiday bill into law, shifting the dates of many federal holidays to give Americans more three-day weekends over the year. Among them was Washington’s birthday, which was then and now observed on the third Monday in February.

While a provision recognizing other presidents such as Abraham Lincoln and Thomas Jefferson was overturned in Congress, the idea stuck and the holiday became informally known as President’s Day. The day is celebrated in different fashions by Americans from historical reenactments to car and mattress sales.

However, as President George W. Bush remarked on what would have been Washington’s 275th birthday, the legacy of the first U.S. president lasts even today.


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