I grew up getting Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday off for Mardi Gras. This was in Mississippi, about an hour northeast of New Orleans. (In New Orleans itself, schools were, I believe, let out the whole week.)
Rhode Island celebrates VJ-day (Victory of Japan Day). Polycarp’s list calls it just Victory Day, but I’ve never heard anyone call it anything but VJ-day.
Gahhh. Victory over Japan day.
Thank you, Polycarp, I will be revealing that list to my boss very soon and be requesting a few days off to celebrate the rich and varied heritage of my nation. You see, I don’t consider myself a Coloradoan so much as an American, and I hardly feel that it’s appropriate to continue on with my trite daily routine without regard for the important mile-stones of various segments of my proud nation.
If anyone needs me, I’ll be sitting around my smoked salmon sampler and making cold calls through the Anchorage phone book come October 18th to celebrate Alaska day. Oh, and so don’t bother calling, either, seeing how I’ll be busy phoning Anchorage, perhaps Fairbanks if time permits.
Regards,
threemae
BluePitBull, where are you writing from? Canada, England, China?
Um. . . You shouldn’t have to live in Massachusetts to know that the American Revolution began on April 19, 1775, when the British regulars marched from Boston into the nearby towns of Lexington and Concord. This was the night of Paul Revere’s ride. This was the day of “the shot heard 'round the world.”
That’s what Patriot’s Day is about. And Maine celebrates it because Maine was part of Massachusetts originally.
History lesson for the day.
“Insulting” I don’t know about, but I do know that I got a certain amount of shit for working on Yom Kippur this year. Even though I’m not observant. It was considered unseemly, somehow. Fortunately, I had a semi-true excuse: Somebody needed to be there, so I worked so my more observant coworkers could go to shul.
Every year, my mom refuses to go out of the house on the high holy days. She doesn’t observe in any way, but Og forbid someone should see her doing something secular. ;j
Well, Paul Revere’s ride was the previous night, alerting the Minutemen to the movements of the Redcoats.
That was six days after my wife’s and my wedding (and 200 years before), so the date sticks in my mind.
Why “Og”?
We used to get Fast Day off in NH, but not in the past decade+
Growing up in the Deep South, we never heard of Jefferson Davis Day, but we never celebrated President’s Day, because of the Lincoln connection.
Bahamas
Did anyone notice what looked like a large # of holidays for P.R.?
I didn’t count them and compare, but it really seems like they do have a very high share of the holidays.
What did you expect them to do? Insist on working these days?
See Dex’s thread on SDMB abbreviations and slanguage, in ATMB. Best short explanation of Og and his 1920s style Death Ray that I’ve seen yet.
Well, yeah. But for somebody who thought the holiday might have something to do with the football team, I went easy. (Plus, since it’s the Midnight ride. . .I was thinking Paul might have been done a bit of traveling into the 19th.)
The 19th is the day of the big “Battle Road” reenactment every year.
Puerto Rico also celebrates Oct 12… but that is considered federal, right?
Also, Good Friday is “celebrated” (meaning almost nothing is open) in Puerto Rico. At least, that’s how it was.
Thanks, but I managed to pick all that up over the last 18 years. The football team bit was just a stupid joke my brother and I used to share when we both moved to this strange state from NY.
How many of the holidays does your average office worker type get off? I’ve never been clear about that. FWIW, here in Canada (specifically Saskatchewan) generally speaking there are not holidays that government offices are closed that other private sector offices are open. This is excepting one negotiated government employee “floating” holiday bookended around a statutory holiday, frequently Canada Day.
Strictly speaking, there are no “national” holidays in the United States, only “federal” holidays, on which employees of the federal government get the day off. Holiday-designating is left to the states.