Daily Calendar for Monday, September 6, 2027

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Monday, September 6, 2027

Always the first Monday in September, Labor Day is meant as a tribute to the American worker to whom the strength, prosperity, and well-being of our country is made possible.

The holiday started modestly in cities and towns, with the first celebration on Tuesday, September 5, 1882, in New York City, held by the Central Labor Union. GIven the growth of labor organizations at this time in American history and the era of industrialization, the idea of a day to honor the American worker quickly spread to other cities and then to states.

In 1884, Congress passed an act making the first Monday in September of each year a legal holiday. The observance of Labor Day began as a street parade to exhibit to the public “the strength and esprit de corps of the trade and labor organizations” of the community, followed by a relaxing day for the workers and their families.

There is some doubt as to the individual who first proposed the holiday for workers. Most believe it was the idea of Peter J. Maguire (although recent research has shown that it might have been his brother Matthew’s idea), a labor union leader who in 1882 proposed a celebration honoring the American worker. The date chosen was simply “convenient,” according to Maguire, because it was midway between the Fourth of July and Thanksgiving.

Although the day’s focus on organized labor has diminished over the years, the legal holiday still marks the end of summer and the traditional time for children to return to school.

Born

  • Heinrich Melchior Muhlenberg (founder of Lutheranism in America)
  • John Dalton (scientist)
  • Frances Wright (author)
  • Jane Addams (social worker)
  • Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr. (diplomat)
  • Jo Anne Worley (comedienne)
  • Swoosie Kurtz (actress)
  • Jane Curtin (actress)
  • Justina Machado (actress)
  • John Wall (basketball player)

Died

  • Martha Jefferson (wife of Thomas Jefferson; died before presidency)
  • Charles Ammi Cutter (librarian)
  • Leslie McFarlane (Hardy Boys writer)
  • Charles E. Bennett (member of the House of Representatives for 44 years. His legislation in 1955 required that the mint put In God We Trust on all currency. Shortly thereafter, Congress made the words the nation’s motto.)
  • Luciano Pavarotti (opera singer)

Events

  • British Mayflower set sail from Plymouth, England, with 102 Pilgrims who hoped to settle in America
  • U.S. President William McKinley was shot by Leon Czolgosz
  • A decree was issued in Germany requiring all Jews over the age of six to wear the Star of David
  • CBFT Montreal was the first Canadian TV station to begin regular broadcast programming in both French and English. CBLT Toronto followed two days later
  • CBFT first Canadian TV station to go on air
  • Georgia Gibbs sang “The Hula-Hoop Song” on The Ed Sullivan Show. This was the first national exposure for the hula-hoop craze
  • Canadian highway signs, except in Quebec and Nova Scotia, converted to metric
  • Cal Ripken, Jr. played his 2,131st game and became a part of baseball history by surpassing Lou Gehrig’s record of 2,130 consecutive games played
  • Fenway Park in Boston, Massachusetts, hosted Bruce Springsteen for its first rock concert in history
  • Jeff Williams returned to Earth after working 172 days on the International Space Station, thereby making a cumulative total of 534 days in space over several missions - the longest time yet recorded for NASA astronauts.

Weather

  • On “Yellow Day,” forest fires in Michigan and Ontario caused a luminous yellow haze throughout the Northeast
  • Iowa had some early snow when a few flakes fell in Alton