Presidents’ Day or Identity Crisis?

February 19, 2024      Kevin Schulman, Founder, DonorVoice and DVCanvass

It’s an odd holiday here in the States.  The Brits might call it a Bank Holiday.

It used to celebrate George Washington’s birthday.  In fact, in the annals of US Government paperwork it’s still officially listed as this by the US Office of Personnel Management, which I think is like their HR Department.

At any rate, Washington was born when the Julian calendar was still being used and according to it, his birthday is February 11th.  England adopted the Gregorian calendar after his birth and just like that he got 11 days younger, his birth moved to February 22nd.

Washington was a living legend and for many reasons, not least of which, his walking away from power.  In a world seemingly dominated by despots and power-hungry autocrats that’s something.

Not to be outdone, Abraham Lincoln was born February 12th.  While alive he was considered by many a buffoon but as is occasionally the case, fame came after death.  He became a cause-celeb.  So much so, Congress debated combining the two Presidents’ birthdays into one holiday.  But, in yet another instance of compromise yielding stupid outcomes and in a way that only our Congress can pull off, they created the “Monday Holidays Act” to move all existing, federal holidays to Mondays to give government workers a three-day holiday.

Tradition and history be damned.  We want our three-days. And so it is that we celebrate no particular President’s birthday on the third Monday of February.

You can file all this under useless info you should purge from your brain immediately to save space.

Kevin

One response to “Presidents’ Day or Identity Crisis?”

  1. Jay B Love says:

    Kevin, we are all now ready for the next Trivia Night!