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This Day in History

February 6, 1917
Just off the coast of Ireland a German submarine torpedoed and sank a U.S. steamer, The California; it was carrying 205 passengers. The damage was such that the ship sank within nine minutes; a total of 43 people died. This occurred three days after President Woodrow Wilson warned Germany that American interests at sea should not be assaulted. On April 6, 1917 the U.S. entered the war.

February 8, 1918
The U.S. resumed publication of “Stars and Stripes,” a military newsletter for Union soldiers started during the Civil War. It was published weekly from February 8, 1918 to June 13, 1919 and was distributed to American soldiers dispersed across the Western Front to keep them unified and informed about the war effort as well as to provide them with news from home. Publication was resumed again during World War II.

 
Election Day: An American Holiday, An American History

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Why is election day on the Tuesday after the first Monday in November?

Originally everything was back-timed so that the voting would be completed by the time the electoral college was to meet on the first Wednesday in December, so in 1792 it was specified that the election for presidential electors needed to be held “within 34 days preceding the first Wednesday in December, every fourth year.”

In 1844 a bill was introduced (passed it in 1845) specifying a uniform election day for all states. The original bill stated “the first Tuesday of November,” but it was amended to note the “first Tuesday after the first Monday…” as that would always keep it within the 34 days prior to the December electoral college meeting date. (The first election where this new schedule was applied was 1848.)

Then in 1887 the date of the meeting of the electoral college was moved to the second Monday in January, in years following a presidential election. Though the date of our elections actually could be any time during the autumn, the U.S. has maintained the earlier tradition of the “Tuesday after the first Monday in November.”

A Tuesday was selected because voters often had to travel to come in to town in order to vote. The government did not want people to have to travel on the sabbath (Sunday for most Americans), so a Tuesday was selected as being a preferred day of the week for voting.

 

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