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Monday, October 12, 2020
Trump Stands Up For Columbus
Jennifer Harper, who writes the Inside the Beltway column at the
Washington Times, offers her take on Columbus Day:
Columbus Day has been around
for a while. The first recorded celebration of Columbus Day in
the U.S. took place on Oct. 12, 1792, and was organized by the New York
City-based Society of St. Tammany — also known as the Columbian Order — to
commemorate the 300th anniversary of Christopher Columbus‘ landing in the
Americas.
So says the Library of Congress, which
notes that the first official Columbus Day holiday
took place in 1892, set forth in a proclamation by President Benjamin Harrison,
who called Columbus “a pioneer of progress and enlightenment.”
In the next two decades, the Knights of
Columbus, an international Roman Catholic fraternal society, lobbied state
legislatures to declare Oct. 12 a legal holiday. Colorado was the first state
to do so in 1907, followed by New York in 1909. President Franklin Delano
Roosevelt designated Columbus Day a
national holiday in 1934. In keeping with such traditions, President Trump has
issued his own proclamation which praises both Columbus and Americans with
Italian heritage.
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