
Al celebrarse un Aniversario más del President’s Day, les presentamos su historia
Y bien, ¿cuándo fue que los estadounidenses reconocimos un día para nuestros presidentes?
El Día de los Presidentes se remonta a nuestro padre fundador y primer Presidente de los Estados Unidos de América, George Washington. Washington nació el 22 de febrero de 1732. En su cumpleaños en 1796, cuando Washington estaba en su último año completo como presidente, esa fecha se convirtió en el día festivo conocido como el Cumpleaños de Washington. Sin embargo, los estadounidenses celebraron este día festivo recién en 1832, 100 años después de su nacimiento.
LE FALTAN ESTRELLAS A LA FOTO!
Abraham Lincoln fue el siguiente presidente en ganar un respeto similar al obtenido por Washington. Nacido el 12 de febrero de 1809, el cumpleaños de Lincoln se celebró por primera vez en 1865, al año siguiente de su asesinato. A pesar de que su cumpleaños no fue honrado como un día festivo a nivel nacional como el de Washington, muchos estados lo adoptaron como un día festivo legal.
En 1968, el congreso aprobó una ley para que todos los días festivos a nivel nacional fueran los días lunes, incluido el cumpleaños de Washington, para crear un fin de semana de tres días. En 1971, el Presidente Richard Nixon combinó los cumpleaños de Washington y Lincoln en el Día de los Presidentes. Se celebraría el tercer lunes de febrero, sin importar en qué día cayera. En la actualidad, el Día de los Presidentes está visto como un día festivo que rinde homenaje a Washington y Lincoln, así como a todos aquellos que hayan servido al país como presidentes.
El Día de los Presidentes se celebra el tercer lunes de febrero.
ENGLISH:
Washington’s Birthday is a United States federal holiday celebrated on the third Monday of February. It is also commonly known as Presidents Day (or Presidents’ Day). As Washington’s Birthday or Presidents Day, it is also the official name of a concurrent state holiday celebrated on the same day in a number of states.
Titled Washington’s Birthday, the federal holiday was originally implemented by the United States of America federal government in 1880 for government offices in the District of Columbia (20 Stat. 277) and expanded in 1885 to include all federal offices (23 Stat. 516). As the first federal holiday to honor an American citizen, the holiday was celebrated on Washington’s actual birthday, February 22. On January 1, 1971 the federal holiday was shifted to the third Monday in February by the Uniform Monday Holiday Act. A draft of the Uniform Holidays Bill of 1968 would have renamed the holiday to Presidents’ Day to honor both Washington and Lincoln, but this proposal failed in committee and the bill as voted on and signed into law on June 28, 1968 kept the name Washington’s Birthday.
In the late 1980s, with a push from advertisers, the term “Presidents’ Day” began its public appearance[citation needed]. The theme has expanded the focus of the holiday to honor another President born in February, Abraham Lincoln, and often other Presidents of the United States. Although Lincoln’s birthday, February 12, was never a federal holiday, approximately a dozen state governments have officially renamed their Washington’s Birthday observances as “Presidents Day”, “Washington and Lincoln Day”, or other such designations. However, “Presidents Day” is not always an all-inclusive term. In Massachusetts, while the state officially celebrates “Washington’s Birthday,” state law also prescribes that the governor issue an annual Presidents Day proclamation honoring the presidents that have come from Massachusetts: John Adams, John Quincy Adams, Calvin Coolidge, and John F. Kennedy.[1] (Coolidge, the only one born outside of Massachusetts, spent his entire political career before the vice presidency there. George H. W. Bush, on the other hand, was born in Massachusetts, but has spent most of his life elsewhere.) Alabama uniquely observes the day as “Washington and Jefferson Day”, even though Jefferson’s birthday was in April.[2] In New Jersey, Connecticut and Illinois, while Washington’s Birthday is a federal holiday, Abraham Lincoln’s birthday is still a state holiday, falling on February 12 regardless of the day of the week. In California, Lincoln’s Birthday is also a legal state holiday, however, observance is frequently moved to the Monday or Friday occurring closest to February 12. When Lincoln’s Birthday is observed on the Friday preceding Washington’s Birthday, the resultant four-day weekend is commonly called “Presidents’ Day Weekend”, particularly by retailers in their sale advertisements.
In Washington’s home state of Virginia the holiday is legally known as “George Washington Day.”
- Las caras (de izquierda a derecha) de George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, y Abraham Lincoln en el Monte Rushmore, situado en Keystone, Dakota del Sur, con lo que se conmemora el nacimiento, el crecimiento, la conservación y el desarro