Georgia Day
Georgia Day |
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Observed by |
Georgia, United States |
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Date |
February 12 |
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Next time |
February 12, 2016 (2016-02-12) |
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Frequency |
annual |
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Georgia Day is the holiday which the U.S. state of Georgia recognizes in honor of its colonial founding as the Province of Georgia. On February 12, 1733, James Oglethorpe landed the first settlers in the Ann, at what was to become Georgia's first city (and later the first state capital), Savannah. Not a public holiday, it was created by Georgia's General Assembly, which provided that Feb. 12, "the anniversary of the landing of the first colonists in Georgia under Oglethorpe"—be observed in the public schools as Georgia Day.[1] The law was never repealed, but was not included in the code when it was officially compiled in 1981. Its official legal status is unclear.
Georgia Day is now observed on or around February 12 at the Georgia Day Parade hosted by the Georgia Historical Society as part of the Georgia History Festival, a two-week celebration of Georgia history.
References
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| January | |
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| February |
- Valentine's Day
- Washington's Birthday (federal, also known as "Presidents' Day")
- Georgia Day (GA)
- Lincoln's Birthday (CA, CT, IL, IN, MO, NJ, NY, WV)
- Primary Election Day (WI)
- Ronald Reagan Day (CA)
- Rosa Parks Day (CA, OH)
- Susan B. Anthony Day (CA, FL, NY, WI, WV)
- National Freedom Day (36)
- Ash Wednesday (religious)
- Courir de Mardi Gras (religious)
- Four Chaplains Day
- Groundhog Day
- American Heart Month
- Black History Month
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| March |
- Easter (religious, sometimes in April)
- Saint Patrick's Day (religious)
- Spring break (week)
- Good Friday (CT, NC, PR, religious, sometimes in April)
- Casimir Pulaski Day (IL)
- Cesar Chavez Day (CA, CO, TX)
- Evacuation Day (MA)
- Mardi Gras (AL (in two counties), LA)
- Maryland Day (MD)
- Passover (religious, sometimes in April)
- Prince Jonah Kuhio Kalanianaole Day (HI)
- Seward's Day (AK)
- Texas Independence Day (TX)
- Town Meeting Day (VT)
- Ash Wednesday (religious)
- Courir de Mardi Gras (religious)
- Easter Monday (religious)
- Palm Sunday (religious, week, sometimes in April)
- Saint Joseph's Day (religious)
- Women's History Month
- National Poison Prevention Week (week)
- Super Tuesday
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| April | |
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| May | |
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| June | |
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| July | |
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| August | |
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| September | |
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| October | |
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| November |
- Thanksgiving (federal)
- Day after Thanksgiving (24)
- Veterans Day (federal)
- Election Day (CA, DE, HI, KY, MT, NJ, NY, OH, PR, WV)
- Family Day (NV)
- Native American Heritage Day (MD)
- Obama Day (Perry County, AL)
- Hanukkah (religious)
- Native American Indian Heritage Month (month)
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| December | |
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| Varies | |
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| Legend:
(federal) = federal holidays, (state) = state holidays, (religious) = religious holidays, (week) = weeklong holidays, (month) = monthlong holidays, (36) = Title 36 Observances and Ceremonies
Bolded text indicates major holidays that are commonly celebrated by Americans, which often represent the major celebrations of the month.
See also: Lists of holidays, Hallmark holidays, public holidays in the United States, Puerto Rico, United States Virgin Islands, New Jersey and New York. |
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