George has his day, and so does Abe. But states honor US presidents in
lots of ways
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[February 17, 2025]
By JOHN HANNA
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Is Presidents Day the most confusing holiday in the
U.S.?
States seem to have as many names for it and ideas about whom to honor
as there have been presidents. The federal government doesn't even
recognize Monday as Presidents Day. It's officially Washington's
Birthday, honoring the first president and the original American
yardstick for measuring greatness.
The holiday hasn't been celebrated on Washington's actual birthday of
Feb. 22, or any other president's birthday, for more than 50 years.
Presidents Day became the popular name after the holiday was fixed to a
Monday.
The result is a jumble, causing some people to yearn for the holiday to
just celebrate Washington again.
“The concept of Presidents Day is a confusing mishmash of ideas,” Hunter
Abell, a Republican state legislator from Washington state, said
recently. “By celebrating all the presidents, I believe that we
inadvertently celebrate none.”
Abell's interest is more than academic: he wants his state to rename its
Presidents Day holiday and made his remarks during a hearing on that
proposal.
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First in war, first in peace, first with a holiday
The federal holiday for Washington started in 1879, but the current date
was fixed by law as of 1971.
States, of course, have been left to their own devices for decades.
Thirty-four still use some form of Washington's name in their laws,
while 19 use some form of Presidents Day. A few use both, while
California law goes with “the third Monday in February.”
Forty-seven states will celebrate a public holiday on Monday. Indiana
and Georgia celebrate Washington by giving state workers the day after
Christmas off.
Delaware has no holiday. In 2009, its lawmakers started giving state
employees “two floating holidays” instead of honoring individual
presidents or having a Presidents Day, according to the state archives.
What's in a name? Plenty, some say
Washington’s Mount Vernon estate in Virginia wants to return to a
federal holiday on his birthday. Its website says Washington’s character
and accomplishments shouldn’t be “muddled” by a “vague” holiday.
A dozen states celebrating Washington by name make him share the day
with someone else.
In Alabama, Washington shares the spotlight with friend-turned-rival
Thomas Jefferson, the nation's third president and primary author of the
Declaration of Independence. In Arkansas, it's Daisy Gaston Bates, a
civil rights leader best known for her work to integrate Little Rock's
Central High School in 1957.
Most often, it’s Abraham Lincoln, the Civil War president who sometimes
outranks even Washington among historians for keeping the Union intact.
Fourteen states have a separate holiday just for Lincoln. Most are on
Honest Abe's Feb. 12 birthday. Indiana honors him with a day off for
state employees on the day after Thanksgiving, which Lincoln is often
credited with starting in 1863.
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A statue on the Kansas Statehouse grounds honors Abraham Lincoln,
the 16th U.S. president, who kept the Union intact during the Civil
War, Friday, Feb. 14, 2025, in Topeka, Kansas. (AP Photo/John Hanna)
 Other presidents have their days,
too
A few states have special days for presidents identified with them:
Herbert Hoover in Iowa, Dwight Eisenhower in Kansas, Harry Truman in
Missouri, Lyndon Johnson in Texas and John F. Kennedy in
Massachusetts.
On JFK’s May 29 birthday, his home state also honors favorite sons
John Adams, John Quincy Adams and Calvin Coolidge, who was a Vermont
farm boy before becoming Massachusetts' governor and, later, the
country's 30th president.
Since 1958 in Kentucky, Jan. 30 has been Franklin D. Roosevelt Day,
though the president who guided the country out of the Great
Depression and through most of World War II was a New Yorker.
In Oklahoma, a Republican state senator has proposed a new holiday
for Nov. 5, the anniversary of last year's presidential election, to
celebrate President Donald J. Trump Day.
What if you had a holiday and people forgot?
A presidential day doesn't necessarily inspire public fanfare.
Take Herbert Hoover, whose Depression-marked White House work gets
low marks from many historians, though he is highly regarded for
nonpresidential humanitarian work.
Iowa set aside a day for him in 1969, but it appears to get little
notice outside Cedar County, the home of his presidential library.
“Most Iowans are not aware there is a Hoover Day,” said Leo Landis,
the state historical society's curator, who acknowledged in an email
that he once was among them, despite living in Iowa for more than 45
years.
First in reenactments?
Presidential impersonators pop up in hundreds of places each year.
It's not just Lincoln and Washington. The Association of Lincoln
Presenters website even lists a portrayer for Rutherford B. Hayes,
the often-neglected single-term 19th president.
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But Lincoln stands head, shoulders and stovepipe hat above the rest
when it comes to presidents audiences want to see, and he dominates
the association's roster of historical presenters.
John Cooper, the association's president and a Lincoln impersonator
himself, said that in scores of professional presentations since
2008, only two people have been displeased with meeting Lincoln.
Honest Abe appeals to all groups and is many people's favorite
president, he said.
“Everybody is happy to see Lincoln,” he said. “When I go to a county
fair, I usually don’t have to wander far before I have people come
up to me, and they want to talk and they want to get a picture."
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