Like the other founding fathers, George Washington was uneasy about the idea of publicly celebrating his life. He was the first leader of a new republic, not a king.
And yet the US will once again commemorate its first President on Monday, 293 years after he was born.
The meaning of Presidents’ Day has changed dramatically, from being mostly unremarkable and filled with work for Washington in the 1700s to the bonanza of consumerism it has become today. For some historians, the holiday has lost all discernible meaning.
Historian Alexis Coe, author of You Never Forget Your First: A Biography of George Washington, has said she thinks about Presidents’ Day in much the same way as the towering monument in D.C. bearing his name.
“It’s supposed to be about Washington, but can you really point to anything that looks or sounds like him?” she remarked in an interview with The Associated Press in 2024.
Here is a look at how things have evolved:
Washington’s birthdays
Washington was born on February 22, 1732, on Popes Creek Plantation near the Potomac River in Virginia.
Technically, though, he was born on February 11 under the ancient Julian calendar, which was still in use for the first 20 years of his life. The Gregorian calendar, intended to more accurately mark the solar year, was adopted in 1752, adding 11 days.
Either way, Washington paid little attention to his birthday, according to Mountvernon.org, the website of the organisation that manages his estate. Surviving records make no mention of observances at Mount Vernon, while his diary shows he was often hard at work.
Washington’s birthday was celebrated by his peers in government when he was President, mostly.
Congress voted during his first two terms to take a short commemorative break each year, with one exception, his last birthday in office, Coe said. By then, Washington was less popular, partisanship was rampant and many members of his original cabinet were gone, including Thomas Jefferson.
“One way to show their disdain for his federalist policies was to keep working through his birthday,” Coe said.
The Library of Congress does note a French military officer, the comte de Rochambeau, threw a ball celebrating Washington’s 50th birthday in 1782.
Memorabilia market
Washington was very aware of his inaugural role as President and its distinction from the British crown. He didn’t want to be honoured like a king, Seth Bruggeman, a history professor at Temple University in Philadelphia, told the AP last year.
Still, he said, a market for Washington memorabilia sprang up almost immediately after his death in 1799 at age 67, with people snapping up pottery and reproductions of etchings portraying him as a divine figure going off into heaven.
Parades & festivals
It wasn’t until 1832, the centennial of his birth, that Congress established a committee to arrange national “parades, orations and festivals”, according to the Congressional Research Service.
Only in 1879 was his birthday formally made into a legal holiday for federal employees in the district of Columbia.
The official designation for the holiday is Washington’s birthday, although it has come to be known informally as Presidents’ Day. Arguments have been made to honour President Lincoln as well because his birth date falls nearby, on February 12.
A small number of states, including Illinois, observe Lincoln’s birthday as a public holiday, according to the Library of Congress. And some commemorate both Lincoln and Washington on Presidents’ Day.
But on the federal level, the day is still officially Washington’s birthday.
Shift to consumerism
By the late 1960s, Washington’s birthday was one of nine federal holidays that fell on specific dates on different days of the week, according to a 2004 article in the National Archives’ Prologue magazine.
Congress voted to move some of those to Mondays, following concerns that were in part about absenteeism among government workers when a holiday fell midweek. But lawmakers also noted clear benefits to the economy, including boosts in retail sales and travel on three-day weekends.
The Uniform Monday Holiday Act took effect in 1971, moving Presidents’ Day to the third Monday in February.
Bruggeman said Washington and the other founding fathers “would have been deeply worried” by how the holiday became taken over by commercial and private interests.
“They were very nervous about corporations,” Bruggeman said. “It wasn’t that they forbade them. But they saw corporations as like little republics that potentially threatened the power of The Republic.”
Coe, who is also a fellow at the Washington think tank New America, said by now the day is devoid of recognisable traditions.
“There’s no moment of reflection,” Coe said. Given today’s widespread cynicism towards the office, she added, that sort of reflection “would probably be a good idea”.