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 Texas : Features : Columns : All Things Historical :

LABOR DAY

by Archie P. McDonald
Archie McDonald Ph.D.
Most of our national holidays commemorate civic events or religious observances; Labor Day celebrates the concept that work is noble and worthy of honor for its own sake.

Eighteenth and nineteenth century European travelers often commented on the industriousness of their American cousins, perhaps without appreciating fully the abundance of the work and the scarceness of workers. Besides, before the nineteenth century America lacked a distinct laboring or working class; this was the consequence of the Industrial Revolution which drew people from the land and made them wage earners in cities where the factories and mills were located.

Prior to the Civil War no real labor unions existed in America. Shortly after that conflict the National Labor Union and the Knights of Labor were organized, but they, too, were less unions of workers than organizations of persons who supported the laboring class and sought through education and legislation to improve their lot.

Samuel L. Gompers, a cigar maker, organized the first real union in 1881, by 1884 known as the American Federation of Labor, or better still by its acronym, “AF of L.”

Peter J. McGuire, a Knight, a founder of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters, and the tenth-born of an Irish American family, persuaded New York’s Central Labor Union to recognize the many working men and women of the city with a parade on September 5, 1882. That was the first Monday in September, a date McGuire suggested for no greater significance than its median status between July 4th and Thanksgiving.

Many of New York’s workers took the day off to participate in or view the parade, then filled out the day with picnics, games, and, inescapably, with oratory. They had such a good time they repeated the celebration the next year, and in 1884 the Knights of Labor officially designated the first Monday of September as Labor Day.

Oregon was the first state to give Labor Day statutory recognition, and did so in 1887; New Jersey and New York followed, and by 1893 thirty states recognized the observance. The number of states commemorating Labor Day increased steadily until only Wyoming did not by 1928; now, all states and the District of Columbia declare Labor Day an official holiday.

Labor Day has not been exclusively for laborers for decades. The advent of the “white-collar worker” and the need for everyone to have a respite from their work resulted in the holiday becoming a reminder of the value of work more than the workers themselves.

Labor Days means lots of things. In a “more civilized time,” as I have sometimes said, it marked the end of summer and the beginning of school--now we do that in smothering August, perhaps because we have air conditioning and mostly to accommodate common calendars that end before Christmas. In that time, Labor Day marked the beginning of state and national political campaigns, which we now suffer all the year through. It was also the time past when no civilized Southern woman would wear white shoes; now I see them in January.

Labor Day remains, however buffeted by the winds of change, a time to remember the nobility of work and to honor those whose efforts produce the wealth of the world. Barbeque, visit the lake, celebrate it as you wish; but give a wave to the fireman, the policeman, the EMS worker, and all who must work while we play.
© Archie P. McDonald
All Things Historical
September 1, 2008 column
A syndicated column in over 70 East Texas newspapers
(The East Texas Historical Association provides this column as a public service. Archie P. McDonald is director of the Association and author of more than 20 books on Texas.)
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