If you are asking about Columbus Day, he did not celebrate it. He could not. It did not become a holiday until hundreds of years after he died. In the late 1400s, Columbus would have only celebrated the holidays that existed-- those were generally church holidays, like Christmas, Easter, and holy days honoring Catholic saints.
Columbus is no longer alive but there is a holiday that we celebrate to remember him The person isn't alive, but there is a Columbus in Ohio.
He claimed North America first. We honor him on that day.
Christopher Columbus.
Christopher Columbus is a person
Christopher Columbus was both success and failure
Columbus Day...
Christopher Columbus Has A holiday named after him it is called Columbus Day
Columbus is no longer alive but there is a holiday that we celebrate to remember him The person isn't alive, but there is a Columbus in Ohio.
Hispanics celebrate Columbus Day in order to commemorate the arrival of Christopher Columbus in the Americas. It is viewed as a celebration of Hispanic heritage for Mexicans.
Columbus is a phony because he got credit for what Amerigo Vespucci discovered. Christopher actually only found the Bahamas. Amerigo Vespucci really discovered America. I don't know why we celebrate ''Columbus Day'' he didn't even find anything! I personally don't celebrate the holiday. I'd rather celebrate ''Amerigo Day'' than ''Columbus Day'' any day! To find out more information about Amerigo Vespucci, or Christopher Columbus, send a message to my wikianswers username: allisonwilinski !!!!!
Since it is a Federal Holiday, all states have Columbus Day.
He claimed North America first. We honor him on that day.
Columbus Day
you should celebrate christmas.you get free presents yay. sometimes you get snow
Yes because it celebrates the day Christopher Columbus came to the Americas and all the people who had celebrated.
There is no definitive evidence to suggest that Christopher Columbus was homosexual. The controversy surrounding his holiday stems from concerns over his treatment of indigenous populations and the impact of European colonization, rather than his sexual orientation.
Columbus Day first became an official state holiday in Colorado in 1906, and became a federal holiday in the United State in 1937, though people have celebrated Columbus' voyage since the colonial period.