Monday, October 8, 2012

Columbus Day

Why Celebrate Columbus Day?


·         Columbus Day recognizes the achievements of a great Renaissance explorer who founded the

first permanent European settlement in the New World. The arrival of Columbus in 1492

marks the beginning of recorded history in America.

·         Columbus Day celebrates the beginning of cultural exchange between America and Europe.

After Columbus, came millions of European immigrants who brought their art, music,

science, medicine, philosophy and religious principles to America. These contributions have

helped shape the United States and include Greek democracy, Roman law, Judeo-Christian

ethics and the tenet that all men are created equal.

·         Columbus Day is one of America s oldest holidays. The tradition of observing Columbus

Day dates back to the 18th century. It was first celebrated on October 12, 1792, when the

New York Society of Tammany honored Columbus on the 300th anniversary of his first

voyage.

·         Columbus Day is a patriotic holiday. In fact, the Pledge of Allegiance was written in 1892 in

honor of the 400th anniversary of his first voyage. That year, President Benjamin Harrison

declared Columbus Day a legal holiday.

·         The United States has long admired Columbus. America has more monuments to Columbus

than any nation in the world, according to the Christopher Columbus Encyclopedia. These

include a Columbus statue in Providence, R.I., cast by Frederic Auguste Bertholdi, who

created the Statue of Liberty, and one in New York City, created by one of the six Italian

American brothers who carved the Lincoln Memorial.

·         The United States has a significant collection of Columbus memorabilia, including his desk,

papers, and the cross he used to claim the New World for Spain. These are in the Columbus

Chapel in Boalsburg, Pennsylvania.

·         In 1971 Columbus Day became a federal holiday in all 50 states after Congress passed a law

declaring the second Monday in October Columbus Day.

·         Columbus Day also commemorates the arrival on these shores of more than 5 million Italians

a century ago. Today, their children and grandchildren constitute the nation’s fifth largest ethnic group, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

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