In 1776 the 4th of July was declared a federal holiday.
1941
July 4th, 1776 ------------------------------ The first law passed by the U.S. Congress recognizing July 4 as a federal holiday was signed into law on June 28, 1870.
The Fourth of July is a holiday. It is a day of celebration as well. So it is both. The first official US holidays were declared by Congress on June 28, 1870. New Years Day, Independence Day, Thanksgiving Day, and Christmas Day were all declared holidays in the first act. George Washington's Birthday was declared a holiday in 1871. According to Title 5 of the US Code, neither Congress or the President has the authority to declare a holiday that must be enforced by the states - Federal holidays are only applicable to Federal employees and the District of Columbia. Each state chooses which holidays it will recognize. Extra: Massachusetts declared the 4th a celebration in 1781. Boston declared the 4th a city holiday in 1783. North Carolina declared the 4th a holiday in 1783. QUOTE: "The act of June 28, 1870, which was apparently prompted by a memorial drafted by local "bankers and business men," provided that New Year's Day, Independence Day, Christmas Day, and "any day appointed or recommended by the President of the United States as a day of public fasting or thanksgiving [were] to be holidays within the District." This legislation was drafted "to correspond with similar laws of States around the District,"3 and "in every State of the Union." A source link is below.
It was signed into law in December 1941, to be in effect from 1942.
July 4th, Independence Day, commemorates the day on which the Declaration of Independence was signed, which is considered to be the beginning of American independence from Britain and its existence as a sovereign nation. Addition: The first official US holidays were declared by Congress on June 28, 1870. New Years Day, Independence Day, Thanksgiving Day, and Christmas Day were all declared holidays in the first act. George Washington's Birthday was declared a holiday in 1871. According to Title 5 of the US Code, neither Congress or the President has the authority to declare a holiday that must be enforced by the states - Federal holidays are only applicable to Federal employees and the District of Columbia. Each state chooses which holidays it will recognize. Extra: Massachusetts declared the 4th a celebration in 1781. Boston declared the 4th a city holiday in 1783. North Carolina declared the 4th a holiday in 1783. Each day was declared a holiday for various reasons, but they all included the ability of workers to observe celebrations without loss of pay because of missed work. QUOTE: "The act of June 28, 1870, which was apparently prompted by a memorial drafted by local "bankers and business men," provided that New Year's Day, Independence Day, Christmas Day, and "any day appointed or recommended by the President of the United States as a day of public fasting or thanksgiving [were] to be holidays within the District." This legislation was drafted "to correspond with similar laws of States around the District,"3 and "in every State of the Union."
Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated in 1968 and President Ronald Reagan signed the bill making his birthday a national holiday in 1983. It was 15 years from the year he was assassinated to the year his birthday was declared a national holiday.
it was fist decoverd in the year1892
Christmas wasn't declared a federal holiday in the USA until June 26, 1870.
July 4th, 1776 ------------------------------ The first law passed by the U.S. Congress recognizing July 4 as a federal holiday was signed into law on June 28, 1870.
In July of 1776.
1894
No, it is not a legal holiday. New Year's Day, January 1st, is a holiday.
1799 was declared
1537
Congress never did. They tried back in 1968, but it was never passed. The holiday most people call Presidents' Day is actually Washington's Birthday.
1941
In the year 2009, Thanksgiving Day is celebrated on November 26th. The day of thanks is to be observed on the fourth Thursday of November in the United States of America. That predictability is given to the holiday by its status as a federal holiday. The law that gave the day the status of a federal holiday was passed on December 26, 1941 [55 Stat 862].
The Fourth of July is a holiday. It is a day of celebration as well. So it is both. The first official US holidays were declared by Congress on June 28, 1870. New Years Day, Independence Day, Thanksgiving Day, and Christmas Day were all declared holidays in the first act. George Washington's Birthday was declared a holiday in 1871. According to Title 5 of the US Code, neither Congress or the President has the authority to declare a holiday that must be enforced by the states - Federal holidays are only applicable to Federal employees and the District of Columbia. Each state chooses which holidays it will recognize. Extra: Massachusetts declared the 4th a celebration in 1781. Boston declared the 4th a city holiday in 1783. North Carolina declared the 4th a holiday in 1783. QUOTE: "The act of June 28, 1870, which was apparently prompted by a memorial drafted by local "bankers and business men," provided that New Year's Day, Independence Day, Christmas Day, and "any day appointed or recommended by the President of the United States as a day of public fasting or thanksgiving [were] to be holidays within the District." This legislation was drafted "to correspond with similar laws of States around the District,"3 and "in every State of the Union." A source link is below.