When was the first Labor Day? When did it become a national holiday? Who "invented" it?
This is a light-hearted look back at the origins of Labor Day, a holiday where we can kick our feet up, enjoy a burger or beer, and celebrate our own awesomeness.
2. The facts:
On June 28, 1894, the U.S. Congress voted to designate the first
Monday of September, “Labor Day,” a federal holiday.
It is the seventh federal holiday established by Congress.
*This is not an actual photo of the U.S. Congress from 1894. This is the 43rd U.S. Congress (20 years earlier)
3. The purpose of Labor Day:
To honor and celebrate the importance of
the American labor force and their social
and economic contribution to the country.
4. “So long as the laboring man
can feel that he holds an
honorable as well as a useful
place in the body politic, so
long will he be a loyal and
faithful citizen.”
— Lawrence McGann
Chairman of the House
Committee on Labor, 1894
This guy totally looks
like Steve Carell
5. But, individual states started it first…
Before Congress established Labor Day as a federal holiday, 23 U.S.
states already recognized it as a legal holiday.
6. TRIVIA:
Which was the first U.S. state
to recognize Labor Day
as a legal holiday?
7. New York was the first state to
introduce a bill to officially recognize
the holiday (Jan. 4, 1887)
14. September 5, 1882 (a Tuesday):
The New York Central Labor Union held an all-day
celebration that included a parade, a picnic, liberal
consumption of beer, and overall high spirits…
15. 5 months earlier…
May 14, 1882:
The recorded minutes of the New York
Central Labor Union’s meeting report a
proposal for a “monster labor festival.”
16. I like to imagine
the proposal went
something like this…
17. “Brethren, let our workingmen have
a day unto themselves when they
shall toil not according to their
crafts; but instead, embark with all
gaiety and great cheer upon the
city streets in celebration of a
monster labor festival…
— Central Labor Union president, Bill Murray
18. “…It will be awesome, and we can
totally get our bosses to give us
the day off if we are so drunk,
that our inebriated attempts at
labor should profit nothing, but
perchance to result, rather, in
more harm than good.”
20. The day of the first parade…
September 5, 1882 (a Tuesday):
At 9am spectators gathered near New York City’s city
hall in such great numbers that police feared a riot
would break out…
21. By 10am, William McCabe, Grand Marshall of the
parade had taken his place at the front of the line,
but no one had arrived with any marching music
22. Shortly after 10, the Jewelers Union of Newark Two
arrived just in time with a band.
What were they playing?
"When I First Put This Uniform On," from Patience, an
opera by Gilbert and Sullivan.
The Jewelers Union
dishin’ out some sass.
23. The parade included nearly 20,000 men and women who
marched from the city hall to Reservoir Park.
Did you know?
The current Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade only involves roughly
10,000 participants.
25. The case for Peter J. McGuire
Co-founded the American
Federation of Labor (AFL)
with Samuel Gompers in 1881
26. The case for Peter J. McGuire
The legend: Peter McGuire
addressed the New York
Central Labor Union on May
12, 1882 and called for a
"street parade which would
publicly show the strength
and esprit de corps of the
trade and labor organizations.”
27. The case for Peter J. McGuire
A union journal reprinted an
article every year crediting
Peter J. McGuire with
proposing the holiday, so the
legend spread…
28. The case for Peter J. McGuire
In a 1897 interview,
Samuel Gompers (McGuire’s
AFL co-founder) gave Peter
J. McGuire credit for
originating Labor Day, and
the legend grew even
more…
29. The case for Peter J. McGuire
But McGuire wasn’t that
great of a guy…
- Arrested for
embezzlement in 1901
- Died an alcoholic in 1906
30. The case for Matthew Maguire
Was a machinist in the Knights of
Labor, a union that rivaled the
American Federation of Labor
31. The case for Matthew Maguire
Was the secretary of the Central
Labor Union in 1882
As secretary, Maguire coordinated
many details of the Sept. 5 parade,
including issuing invitations to union
members to “review the Procession of
the Trade and Labor Unions of New
York and Vicinity” on August 31, 1882
32. The case for Matthew Maguire
The New York City parade Grand
Marshall, William McCabe openly
reminisced about Matthew Maguire
first suggesting the parade…
33. The case for Matthew Maguire
“…There is no question as
to who is the father of
Labor Day in this country.
Officially, as of this
moment, insofar as the
Department of Labor is
concerned, it is Matt
Maguire, machinist!”
— W. Willard Wirtz,
Secretary of Labor; 1968
34. The Truth is…
…to this day, no one knows for sure. Both men were involved in
the planning of the original parade, and both were prominent
members of the labor unions in New York during that time.
Historians still argue about it.
41. American Icons of Labor
Rosie the Riveter
A 1942 war-time poster by J. Howard Miller.
It was never named Rosie, but later became
the cultural icon Americans identified as Rosie
The official “Rosie the Riveter,”
by Norman Rockwell, 1943
42. Labor Day now…
Today, Labor Day is less about parades and is more about grilling
burgers and having one last day off before summer ends…
43. For kids, it often means the looming school year
hides in the shadows on Monday night, waiting for
them to fall asleep…
44. Not everyone gets
Labor Day off…
It’s sad, but not everyone gets to take the
day off. Here are just a few of the
professions that still have to punch in
bright and early, Monday morning…
45. Police Officers
Firefighters
Nurses & Doctors
Retail employees
Airline/Airport employees
Cab Drivers
Bus Drivers
Many more…
54. Image Sources:
"CityHall 1911" by Flannery Family - New York City Hall Library. Via Wikipedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
File:CityHall_1911.JPG#mediaviewer/File:CityHall_1911.JPG
43rd US Congress (1874) By Redington & Shaffer, landscape photographers, P.O. Box 258, Washington, D.C. [Public domain], via Wikimedia
Commons
"LawrenceEMcGann" by An Illustrated Congressional Manual. The United States Red Book, 1896, (detail), Collection of U.S. House of
Representatives - Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Licensed under Public domain via Wikimedia Commons - http://
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:LawrenceEMcGann.jpg#mediaviewer/File:LawrenceEMcGann.jpg
"W. Willard Wirtz" by Photograph in the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, Boston - http://www.jfklibrary.org/Asset+Tree/
Asset+Viewers/Image+Asset+Viewer.htm?guid={648C8798-0C58-4508-A7A2-F4F6433D0BAD}&type=lgImage. Licensed under Public domain via
Wikimedia Commons - http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:W._Willard_Wirtz.jpg#mediaviewer/File:W._Willard_Wirtz.jpg
"69workmen" by Andrew J. Russell (1830-1902), photographer - National Park Service. http://www.nps.gov/gosp/index.htm. Licensed under
Public domain via Wikimedia Commons - http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:69workmen.jpg#mediaviewer/File:69workmen.jpg
"Ford assembly line - 1913" by Unknown - http://www.gpschools.org/ci/depts/eng/k5/third/fordpic.htm. Licensed under Public domain via
Wikimedia Commons - http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ford_assembly_line_-_1913.jpg#mediaviewer/File:Ford_assembly_line_-_1913.jpg
"Lunch-atop-a-skyscraper-c1932" by Bettman Archive. Licensed under Fair use of copyrighted material in the context of Lunch atop a
Skyscraper via Wikipedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Lunch-atop-a-skyscraper-c1932.jpg#mediaviewer/File:Lunch-atop-a-skyscraper-c1932.
jpg
"Damforms" by Bureau of Reclamation photographer - http://www.usbr.gov/lc/region/g5000/photolab/gallery_detail.cfm?PICIDTYPE=7260.
Licensed under Public domain via Wikimedia Commons - http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Damforms.jpg#mediaviewer/File:Damforms.jpg
Golden Gate Bridge Photograph by: Hiller, Charles M.; September, 1935; Contributing Institution: Marin County Free Library