Before it became a federal holiday, Labor Day was recognized by labor activists and individual states. Oregon was the first state to pass a law recognizing Labor Day, on Feb. 21, 1887. Over the next few years more states passed laws creating the holiday and on June 28, 1894, Congress passed an act making the first Monday in September of each year a legal holiday.
Webb City Register
Monday, Sept. 4, 1905To Observe Labor Day
Jefferson City, Mo., Aug. 28, 1905
Governor Folk Saturday issued the following Labor Day proclamation:
The national and state governments in recognition of the dignity of American labor, having set apart the first Monday in September of each year as a holiday in honor of those whose honest toil is the foundation of national happiness and prosperity and it being appropriate that all should join in doing honor to those who earn their bread in the sweat of their faces:
I, Joseph W. Folk, governor of said state, do hereby proclaim that Monday, Sept. 4, 1905, is Labor day, and a legal holiday in Missouri, and recommend that the people of Missouri, so far as may be practicable, abstain from their usual vocations on that day, and unite in their several localities in the exercises becoming to this occasion.
In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand and caused to be affixed the great seal of the state of Missouri.
Done at office in the city of Jefferson, this 26th day of August.
The Webb City Sentinel isn’t a newspaper – but it used to be, serving Webb City, Missouri, in print from 1879-2020. This “newspaper” seeks to carry on that tradition as a nonprofit corporation.
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