Labor Day Holiday, Celebration Facts- No Work Weekends, 40 Hr. Wks, Pd. Sick Leave: NPR
- NPR, Sept. 3, 2021.
Happy Labor Day weekend, America.
The very first Labor Day in the country was celebrated in 1882, and it became an official federal holiday in 1894. The holiday falls on the first Monday of September. The day typically celebrated with picnics and parades has more to it than that, though.
To mark the nation's 139th Labor Day, here's some trivia about the holiday you didn't know you needed:
- It was celebrated in a few states first before it became a federal holiday: Labor activists first started recognizing Labor Day before states started to unofficially celebrate it. New York was the first state to introduce a bill to write the holiday into state legislation. Oregon, though, became the first state to pass it into law in 1887. Colorado, Massachusetts and New York soon followed.
- The first Labor Day celebration had a lot of beer: The first major Labor Day parade was held in Manhattan near city hall in 1882. Police were worried about a riot breaking out, so there was a large police presence in the area. The problem, though, was that almost no one showed up at first to actually march. Awkward. There was no music playing, and the few people present almost gave up before 200 people from the Jeweler's Union showed up and then things were on a roll. Around 20,000 people ended up marching that day. Then came the party. Reports at the time said after the parade, there were "Lager beer kegs ... mounted in every conceivable place."
Some traditions, it seems, really stand the test of time.
- In the Department of Labor, women led first: The Dept. of Labor, which was created after Labor Day already existed as a holiday, was the first department led by a woman: Frances Perkins. Perkins helped lead President Franklin Roosevelt's administration through changes in labor policy after the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire in 1911, in which 146 people died. The Labor Department is also the agency that has had the most women secretaries, six in total.
- The day off is great. But what exactly are we celebrating? A lot. Do you enjoy not having to work weekends? The 40-hour work week? Having sick days and paid time off? You can thank labor leaders for that. Thousands of Americans have marched, protested and participated in strikes in order to create fairer, more equitable labor laws and workplaces and still do today...
https://www.npr.org/2021/09/03/1032844693/when-is-labor-day-why-do-we-celebrate-it
- Labor Day parade in Union Square, New York City, 1882.

Skittles
(164,013 posts)I have NEVER worked in those conditions...not ever. I work weekends, holidays...and eight hour days is a pipe dream. I do get sick pay but the last time I called in sick was twenty years ago.
appalachiablue
(43,531 posts)secure, unionized employment c. 1935- 1975, but not everyone. Then it was Reaganism, Libertarians and Free Market, anti worker ideology. Before then, labor activists fought to end 54+ hour weeks and other harsh, inhumane conditions.
Quakerfriend
(5,828 posts)The documentary about this-
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triangle_Shirtwaist_Factory_fire
appalachiablue
(43,531 posts)I just posted about it and Labor Secy. Francis Perkins in the Video Section, front page.
BigmanPigman
(52,972 posts)"and the door to the Washington Place stairway was locked to prevent theft by the workers; the locked doors allowed managers to check the women's purses. Various historians have also ascribed the exit doors being locked to management's wanting to keep out union organizers due to management's anti-union bias."
Anti-union assholes over 100 years ago.
MichMan
(15,073 posts)appalachiablue
(43,531 posts)diminished since the initial goals and implementation which aimed at weekends free, 40 hr weeks, more. It's all been breaking down for 40 years. Since the 1980s- rise of Reagan, union busting, free market ideology, deregulation of the free enterprise system.. see #3.
MichMan
(15,073 posts)For that matter, many UAW workers work Saturdays regularly. I did when I worked in a Ford plant in 1979. Nothing new
People get paid overtime, but there are many union employees that work over 40 hrs a week also including weekends.