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[edit] HistorySome Labor history: Day was first identified as an International Labor Day by the Second International in 1889, in solidarity with the eight "Martyrs of Haymarket," the socialist and anarchist leaders who were collectively held responsible for the actions of an anonymous bomb-thrower at the Haymarket Square rally for the 8-hour work day on May 4th, 1886, in Chicago, more due to their political views than to any connection to the actual bomb-thrower, who remains unknown to this day (four were executed, one killed in his cell just before his execution under mysterious circumstances, and the other three were later pardoned by Illinois' Governor Altgeld in 1893). It was only in 1892 that an "official" Labor Day was established by Congress as the first Monday in September, some say in an attempt to prevent identification with International Labor Day in May (the further establishment of a "Loyalty Day" on May 1st would lend credence to this theory). Nonetheless, May 1st is also celebrated in the United States by socialists, trade unionists, and leftists of all kinds, both in the 1920s and today, without the official sanction of the U.S. government. Ultimately, I think that the concept of a Labor Day should be enough to establish a single entry, with links to the specific date or way it is celebrated in every individual country, be it Canada, Germany, the United States or wherever else. The histories of the two are definitely linked.
I found one web page claiming that the unusual date for Labour Day in the US and Canada stems from an early-September event in Canada that led to the repeal of a ban on unions, and that the US picked it up from there: http://www.perf.bc.ca/cep1092/labday.htm No idea if it's true or not, but there you go. -- Paul Drye == It's pretty silly to have articles on both Labour Day and Labor Day but get over it! I think that they should be merged. --Taw
== The only reason the U.S. government specifically chose May 1 for Loyalty Day is to attempt to forestall the celebration of Labor Day on that day. - Hephaestos 18:19 May 2, 2003 (UTC)
This is very confusing. As far as I know, Labour Day is a holiday in Semptember only celebrated by Americans. May Day is not celebrated over there. They are two different holidays, right? --BL Further to BL's post... In the UK, Labor Day refers only to the American holiday (we don't celebrate 'Labour Day'... the holiday described in the article would be called 'May Day' here. I don't know about other European/Commonwealth countries. Thus it seems odd to point 'Labor Day' to 'Labour Day' and not the other way around. Also, have a great Labor Day Holiday! Mysteronald 23:11, 5 Sep 2004 (UTC) Does en.wikipedia.org have an offical policy on using American vs. British spelling or is it on an article by article basis? At the very least we should make this article coherent in its usage: adopt one standard spelling when speaking of the holiday in general and use the specific spelling of the holiday on a country by country basis when speaking only of that particular country. I suspect that the most reasonable approach would be to adopt the spelling "Labor Day" for the general holiday (since the vast majority of people on the planet who celebrate this holiday are American) and use the British/Canadian spelling for the Canadian holiday. And before anyone starts howling...I happen to be Canadian myself. --Peeter 17:09, 6 Sep 2004 (UTC)
________________________ To those of us interesting in preserving our Canadian contributions to the North American "Labour/labor" day holiday, I am somewhat dismayed at the depth of American details in comparison to the Canadian history. In reality the holiday stems from grass roots labour movements in both contries, each movement leveraging momentum and precedence from each other: Canadian labour demonstrations starting in 1872, U.S demonstrations starting several years later, U.S. legistation established, Canadian legislation then follows. Why not write the article with a more even North American tone? [edit] SplitUNtil this article has significantly more to it than it does now, I can see any reason for a split. That said, I think that an expansion and split is quite possible, but only once the metarial is there to justify it. Caerwine 14:09, 19 August 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Three entries, two entries, one entry ?May Day, Labor Day, Labour Day... I understand US Labour Day is specific (it's exactly like May Day, was instituted in remembrance of the 1886 Haymarket Riot, but is in September - well, doesn't matter that much, does it?), so maybe it should be kept a separate entry (in particular to keep the main Labor Day entry getting too big). But, what's the difference between May Day and Labor Day? In all European countries, to my knowledge, both are not only synonyms, but identicals! Let's merge both of them, and keep the US specific labor apart, what d'ya think boyz? Kaliz 02:58, 8 January 2006 (UTC)
Labour Day is a Canadian Holiday, Labor day is an American one - it makes no sense to put them on the same page!! It doesn't take much effort to click a link. But lets use Labour (CDN english spelling) - I know that people will try to force it to be the 'Americanized' version - which shows why each nation should have their own page. It doesn't cause much of a conflict. I prefer 1 article as well. In Malaysia, we celebrate Labour Day on May 1 and it's an official public holiday here. We don't call it May Day nor do we celebrate the US Labor Day in September. Just FYI. - kris from Malaysia.
[edit] Germany and Labour DayThe section on Germany is not exactly NPOV, but I'm not sure how to fix it. Andjam 08:11, 1 March 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Merge with May Day?I think that while very related, they are often different (esp in Canada for example) so I would vote no merge j-beda 16:57, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Discuss links hereEditors regularly clean out undiscussed links from this article. Please discuss here if you want a link not to be cleaned out regularly. (You can help!) --VS talk 04:38, 27 April 2007 (UTC) VS talk has removed an external link to a website which I publish containing information and on May Day in Australia. I believe this link is still relevant to the article. To avoid a conflict of interest, I should not post the link to the article myself unless it has been discussed on this page. Other editors are free to post the link if they think it is relevant. [edit] Denmark and Labour DayIn the article it says that Denmark do not celebrate Labour Day...this is wrong. It is not a public holiday as such, but half a day off for all employed in the public sector and a whole holiday for many workers.....big Labour Day-demonstrations are held each year, the biggest in Fælledparken, Copenhagen with approx 70.000 participants. Copeh 08:47, 2 May 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Labor vs. LabourI know this is a British vs. American issue, but it would really be great if the spelling were consistent throughout the entire article. The guidelines don't really help to decide for either version in this case, but since the article's title is "Labour Day", I'd rather stick to the British spelling. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 80.108.109.173 (talk) 18:04, 10 September 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Merge with "International Workers Day"?International Workers' Day seems to overlap this article pretty much. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 80.203.242.203 (talk) 00:00, 10 March 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Call for consensusThis seems to be resurrected and yet never resolved each year at May 1. The two pages are (as of now) mostly duplicates. There's a separate article for the United States' Labor Day, so this needs to redirect to International Workers' Day, or vice-versa, or this needs to become Labour Day (New Zealand), or it needs to change to something else entirely. But there cannot remain two articles which cover the same topic and list international workers day celebrations in two different places: see the guidelines WP:MergeDup and WP:MergeOver on why this is a problem.
[edit] Chinese Holiday?A friend in China told me this was a national holiday for three solid days, and so I Wikipedia'd it to see what was up. Lo and behold, it's true, but... this idea that the Chinese government shoved together three traditional holidays strikes me as odd, particularly given that one of them is the Mid-Autumn Festival. May 1st seems a strange time to have a mid-autumn festival in the northern hemisphere... or am I missing something? Iamvered (talk) 15:55, 1 May 2008 (UTC) Starting from last year, the Labour Day national holiday was reduced from 3 days to 1 day. Together with the subsequent weekend, a 3-day holiday is formed. Mid-Autumn Festival is a new holiday since last year.129.94.30.7 (talk) —Preceding undated comment added 06:32, 11 May 2009 (UTC). [edit] United Kingdom and Labour DayMay 1 is not a national holiday in United Kingdom. There are several places where you can find info about it. With a quick look in google: "nor is it a bank holiday in the United Kingdom" in [1]. Anyway, the best test is that last May 1 (4 days ago) I had to go to work ;) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Samer.hc (talk • contribs) 02:32, 5 May 2008 (UTC) [edit] Jamaica copyvio?The section about Labour Day in Jamaica appears to have been largely lifted intact from "History of Labour Day". National Labour Day 2008. Jamaica Information Service. http://www.jis.gov.jm/special_sections/labourDay2008/history.htm.. This page carries a valid copyright notice so the text is not in the public domain. This issue needs to be addressed and the section rewritten or removed. - Dravecky (talk) 17:08, 21 July 2008 (UTC) [edit] HungaryThe Hungarian labourr day is held on 1st May, like in China or in Germany. It should be noticed in the article. Bye [edit] India sectionA large portion of the section on India sounds more like an op-ed piece on "The History of International Worker's Day" - there's no citations, it's very 'opinion' oriented, and it's less about India than 'the history of the day' - if it belongs anywhere it belongs at the beginning of the article. Could someone with more Wikipedia editing experience address this issue? (or politely tell me I'm wrong?) This is the section I'm talking about:
Hollow Shel (talk) 05:06, 31 August 2009 (UTC) Categories: Unassessed New Zealand articles | Low-importance New Zealand articles | B-Class Holidays articles | High-importance Holidays articles | WikiProject Holidays articles | B-Class organized labour articles | High-importance organized labour articles | Organized Labour Portal AOTD | Selected anniversaries (September 2004) | Selected anniversaries (October 2004) | Selected anniversaries (September 2005) | Selected anniversaries (October 2005) | Selected anniversaries (September 2006) | Selected anniversaries (October 2006) | Selected anniversaries (September 2007) | Selected anniversaries (October 2007) | Selected anniversaries (September 2008) | Selected anniversaries (October 2008) | Selected anniversaries (September 2009) | Selected anniversaries (October 2009) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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