From the start of the 20th century until 2014, the 3rd of July was on a Sunday in the following years:
1904
1910
1921
1927
1932
1938
1949
1955
1960
1966
1977
1983
1988
1994
2005
2011
From the start of the 20th century until 2014, the 3rd of July was on a Sunday in the following years:
1904
1910
1921
1927
1932
1938
1949
1955
1960
1966
1977
1983
1988
1994
2005
2011
From the start of the 20th century until 2014, the 3rd of July was on a Sunday in the following years:
1904
1910
1921
1927
1932
1938
1949
1955
1960
1966
1977
1983
1988
1994
2005
2011
From the start of the 20th century until 2014, the 3rd of July was on a Sunday in the following years:
1904
1910
1921
1927
1932
1938
1949
1955
1960
1966
1977
1983
1988
1994
2005
2011
From the start of the 20th century until 2014, the 3rd of July was on a Sunday in the following years:
1904
1910
1921
1927
1932
1938
1949
1955
1960
1966
1977
1983
1988
1994
2005
2011
From the start of the 20th century until 2014, the 3rd of July was on a Sunday in the following years:
1904
1910
1921
1927
1932
1938
1949
1955
1960
1966
1977
1983
1988
1994
2005
2011
From the start of the 20th century until 2014, the 3rd of July was on a Sunday in the following years:
1904
1910
1921
1927
1932
1938
1949
1955
1960
1966
1977
1983
1988
1994
2005
2011
From the start of the 20th century until 2014, the 3rd of July was on a Sunday in the following years:
1904
1910
1921
1927
1932
1938
1949
1955
1960
1966
1977
1983
1988
1994
2005
2011
From the start of the 20th century until 2014, the 3rd of July was on a Sunday in the following years:
1904
1910
1921
1927
1932
1938
1949
1955
1960
1966
1977
1983
1988
1994
2005
2011
From the start of the 20th century until 2014, the 3rd of July was on a Sunday in the following years:
1904
1910
1921
1927
1932
1938
1949
1955
1960
1966
1977
1983
1988
1994
2005
2011
From the start of the 20th century until 2014, the 3rd of July was on a Sunday in the following years:
1904
1910
1921
1927
1932
1938
1949
1955
1960
1966
1977
1983
1988
1994
2005
2011
From the start of the 20th century until 2014, the 3rd of July was on a Sunday in the following years:
1904
1910
1921
1927
1932
1938
1949
1955
1960
1966
1977
1983
1988
1994
2005
2011
July 25th will be on a Sunday the year 2017.
July 3rd, 1966 fell on a Sunday. The following year, it fell on a Monday.
The last time July 15 fell on a Sunday was in 2007.
3 weeks after Sunday, July 18, 2010 = Sunday, August 8, 2010.
2011
It was last on a Sunday in 2010. In 2015 it will be on Saturday, but because 2016 is a leap year, July 4 skips Sunday to be on Monday in 2016. Sunday will come round again in 2021. Going from 2010 to 2021, these are the days and dates for the 4th of July: Sunday 4th of July 2010 Monday 4th of July 2011 Wednesday 4th of July 2012 (leap year) Thursday 4th of July 2013 Friday 4th of July 2014 Saturday 4th of July 2015 Monday 4th of July 2016 (leap year) Tuesday 4th of July 2017 Wednesday 4th of July 2018 Thursday 4th of July 2019 Saturday 4th of July 2020 (leap year) Sunday 4th of July 2021
The last time 1 July fell on a Sunday was in 2007.
Sunday
2004, 2010, 1999.
Roman Catholic AnswerThey would depend on whether it was a Sunday or a weekday. In the Calendar, post Vatican II, July 3 is the Feast of John the Apostle, which has a proper Gospel: John 20:24-29. If July 3 falls on a Sunday, then it would be the Gospel proper to that Sunday which would depend on when Easter was, and what cycle of readings you were on - the Lectionary runs in a three year cycle. July 3 would fall in Ordinary Time, but you would need to know the date, including the year, to find out which Sunday it was. There is only one Gospel a day in the Catholic Church.
2012 is a leap year starting on a Sunday. The Friday 13ths in this year occur in January, April and July. So there will be 3 of them.
It was a Sunday.