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Columbus Day is a observance honoring Christopher Columbus's first voyage to the Americas in
1492. The holiday is observed in the United States by banks, the post office and most governments and schools,
while most businesses remain open. American's should display the U.S. Flag on this day.
A popular rhyme learned by most school children is "In fourteen hundred and ninety-two Columbus sailed the ocean
blue". This was a way to remember what year Columbus' ships the Nina, Pinta and the Santa Maria arrived in America.
The tune playing was taken from a secular melody originally written by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. It is
most commonly known as "Mary had a Little Lamb", but is also the tune for "Columbus' First Voyage.
Here are they lyrics:
Columbus sailed the ocean blue,
Ocean blue, ocean blue.
Columbus sailed the ocean blue
In 1492.
He sailed west to reach the east,
reach the east, reach the east,
He sailed west to reach the east
In 1492.
Asian shores he never reached,
Never reached, never reached,
Asian shores he never reached,
In 1492.
Instead, a whole new land he found,
Land he found, land he found,
Instead, a whole new land he found,
In 1492.


History of Columbus Day
Courtesy of The History Channel's "History.com"
The first recorded celebration honoring the discovery of America by Europeans took place on October 12, 1792 in New
York City. The event, which celebrated the 300th anniversary of Columbus' landing in the New World, was organized by
The Society of St. Tammany (also known as the Columbian Order).
San Francisco's Italian community held their first Columbus Day celebration in 1869. In 1892, President Benjamin
Harrison urged citizens to participate in the the 400th anniversary celebration of Columbus' first voyage. It was
during this event that the Pledge of Allegiance, written by Francis Bellamy, was recited publically for the first
time.
Colorado was the first state to observe the holiday in 1905.
In 1937, President Roosevelt proclaimed October 12 as "Columbus Day" and in 1971, President Nixon declared
the second Monday of October a national holiday. The first recorded celebration honoring the discovery of America
by Europeans took place on October 12, 1792 in New York City.


Christopher Columbus
Courtesy of The History Channel's "History.com"
In Spanish he is called Cristobal Colon, in Portuguese Cristovio Colombo and in Italian Cristoforo Colombo. Italian
mariner and navigator Christopher Columbus was widely believed to be the first European to sail across the Atlantic
Ocean and successfully land on the American continent. Born between August and October 1451, in Genoa, Italy,
Columbus was the eldest son of Domenico Colombo, a wool-worker and small-scale merchant, and his wife, Susanna
Fontanarossa; he had two younger brothers, Bartholomew and Diego. He received little formal education and was a
largely self-taught man, later learning to read Latin and write Castilian.
Columbus began working at sea early on, and made his first considerable voyage, to the Aegean island of Chios,
in 1475. A year later, he survived a shipwreck off Cape St. Vincent and swam ashore, after which he moved to
Lisbon, Portugal, where his brother Bartholomew, an expert chart maker, was living. Both brothers worked as
chartmakers, but Columbus already nurtured dreams of making his fortune at sea. In 1477, he sailed to England
and Ireland, and possibly Iceland, with the Portuguese marine, and he was engaged as a sugar buyer in the
Portuguese islands off Africa (the Azores, Cape Verde, and Madeira) by a Genoese mercantile firm. He met pilots
and navigators who believed in the existence of islands farther west. It was at this time that he made his last
visit to his native city, but he always remained a Genoese, never becoming a naturalized citizen of any other
country.
Returning to Lisbon, he married the well-born Dona Filipa Perestrello e Moniz in 1479. Their son, Diego, was born
in 1480. Felipa died in 1485, and Columbus later began a relationship with Beatriz Enríquez de Harana of Cordoba,
with whom he had a second son, Ferdinand. (Columbus and Beatriz never married, but he provided for her in his
will and legitimatized Ferdinand, in accordance with Castilian law.)
By the time he was 31 or 32, Columbus had become a master mariner in the Portuguese merchant service. It is
thought by some that he was greatly influenced by his brother, Bartholomew, who may have accompanied Bartholomew
Diaz on his voyage to the Cape of Good Hope, and by Martin Alonso Pinzon, the pilot who commanded the Pinta on
the first voyage. Columbus was but one among many who believed one could reach land by sailing west.
By the mid-1480s, Columbus had become focused on his plans of discovery, chief among them the desire to discover
a westward route to Asia. In 1484, he had asked King John II of Portugal to back his voyage west, but had been
refused. The next year, he went to Spain with his young son, Diego, to seek the aid of Queen Isabella of Castile
and her husband, King Ferdinand of Aragon. Though the Spanish monarchs at first rejected Columbus, they gave him
a small annuity to live on, and he remained hopeful of convincing them. In January of 1492, after being twice
rebuffed, Columbus obtained the support of Ferdinand and Isabella. The favorable response came directly after
the fall of Granada, the last Moorish stronghold in Spain, which led Spanish Christians to believe they were
close to eliminating the spread of Islam in southern Europe and beyond. Christian missionary zeal, as well as
the desire to increase Spanish prominence in Europe over that of Portugal and the desire for gold and conquest,
were the primary driving forces behind Columbus' historic voyage.
Columbus would make four voyages to the West Indies, but by the end of his final voyage, Columbus' health had
deteriorated; he was suffering from arthritis as well as the aftereffects of a bout with malaria. With a small
portion of the gold brought from Hispaniola, Columbus was able to live relatively comfortably in Seville for
the last year of his life. He was emotionally diminished, however, and felt that the Spanish monarchs had failed
to live up to their side of the agreement and provide him with New World property and gold, especially after
Isabella's death. Columbus followed the court of King Ferdinand from Segovia to Salamanca to Vallodid seeking
redress, but was rejected. He died in Vallodid on May 20, 1506. His remains were later moved to the Cathedral
of Santo Domingo in Hispaniola, where they were laid with those of his son Diego. They were returned to Spain
in 1899 and interred in Seville Cathedral.

Columbus Day Controversy
Courtesy of The History Channel's "History.com"
Although Columbus was not the first European mariner to sail to the New World - the Vikings set up colonies
(c.1000) in Greenland and Newfoundland - his voyages mark the beginning of continuous European efforts to
explore and colonize the Americas.
The debate over Columbus' character and legacy has continued into the twenty-first century, revived in 1992
with the celebration of the quincentenary of his first voyage to the New World. During the 1980s and 90s, the
image of Columbus as a hero was tarnished by criticism from Native Americans and revisionist historians.
Though the United States celebrates a national holiday in his honor (on the second Monday of October,
closest to October 12, the date of the first landfall in 1492), much more attention has been paid in recent
years to the Spanish explorers' treatment of the Native American peoples, and the word "discovery" has been
replaced by "encounter" when used to describe Columbus' achievements in regard to the Americas. Columbus went
to his grave believing he had reached the shores of Cathay, and that he was a divine missionary, ordained by God
to spread Christianity into the New World.
In modern society, many have made Columbus out to be a villain and a symbol for all that is exploitative and
predatory about the colonization of the Americas by Europe. Traditional historians view his voyages as opening
the New World to Western civilization and Christianity. For revisionist historians, however, his voyages symbolize
the more brutal aspects of European colonization and represent the beginning of the destruction of Native American
peoples and culture. One point of agreement among all interpretations is that his voyages were one of the turning
points in history.

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