USA Federal Holidays and Celebrations
Work schedules may or may not be affected by these holidays.
New Year's Day, January 1st.
Birthday of Martin Luther King, third Monday in January.
Inauguration Day, January 20th every four years, starting in 1937.
Washington's Birthday, third Monday in February since 1971; prior to that year, it was celebrated on the traditional date of February 22.
Inauguration Day, March 4th every four years, pre-1937.
Armed Forces Day, third Saturday in May.
Memorial Day, last Monday in May since 1971; from 1868 to 1970 it was celebrated on May 30, and was called Decoration Day for part of that time.
Flag Day, June 14th.
United States of America's Independence Day, July 4.
Labor Day, first Monday in September.
Columbus Day, second Monday in October (federal holiday since 1971).
Election Day, Tuesday on or after November 2.
Veterans Day, November 11th (except from 1971 to 1977, inclusive, when it was celebrated on the fourth Monday in October; formerly known as Armistice).
Thanksgiving Day, fourth Thursday in November.
Christmas Day, December 25th. I have finally included this since it is a federal holiday, although it is not based on a secular holiday
2007-03-14 04:19:45
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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That's an excellent question. I'd like to know that myself. I'll keep up with this question to find out. Way to go.
2007-03-14 04:28:06
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answer #2
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answered by jean d 6
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you can try yahoo greetings or msn greetings. i am slways seeing cards for friendship day. you have six toes day.etc...you get the point
2007-03-14 05:11:17
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answer #3
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answered by tiffmom78 3
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This is pretty thourough
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holidays_of_the_United_States
2007-03-14 04:20:40
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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