Columbus Day: What are we celebrating?
Who was Christopher Columbus anyway?
An excellent Italian-born navigator and explorer, Columbus and his expedition landed on an island in the Bahamas on Oct. 12, 1492, and changed history. He made three more voyages, bringing shiploads of adventurous Spaniards. Why did he come and why are we celebrating that? Common consensus agrees that 1492 was the turning point for the Americas. Although there had been earlier discoveries, it was the Columbus expeditions that marked the beginning of a total European conquest that endures today.
In 1492 the European trading networks were based on the Italian ports of the Mediterranean, from where merchants traveled to Asia and Africa. Venetian merchants had a monopoly on trade from the Mediterranean through Arabia to India and eastern Asia. But Spain wanted to circumvent them. They wanted a direct route to Asia.
Portugal did, too. Portugal had no Mediterranean ports. Christopher Columbus, a brilliant Genoese navigator, had the solution for them: sail west instead of east to reach Asia directly. He first approached the Portuguese king who considered his proposal but ultimately rejected it; the king probably already knew about North America because the Portuguese had been fishing for cod off the Labrador Banks for years — but that remained a state secret. The king probably also realized that Columbus’s math vastly underestimated the distance.
Columbus took his plan next to Queen Isabel of Castille who embraced the idea enthusiastically and got the support of King Ferdinand of Aragon, her husband, to finance his voyages. Because of his superior navigation skills, Columbus managed to reach land even though supplies ran out too soon with a distance still to cover. His three-ship expedition landed on an island in the Caribbean, and Columbus proceeded to claim it for Spain.
The dreams of the men with him who hoped to gain land of their own seemed to be fulfilled. The Spanish Crown anticipated a return on their investment and saw a future of wealth from the control of a global shipping network. The church saw its ambition of creating more Christians by converting the indigenous peoples as promising.
And the Caribbean peoples’ hopes? They were dashed by the violence of the European invaders. While Spain conquered and settled Europeans — mostly men — across the Americas, the native peoples died in enormous numbers, from violence as well as the contagious illnesses brought by the Europeans.
Spain profited greatly from the discovery and, just 50 years later in 1542, became the first country to hold a “Columbus Day” celebration. It was declared a religious holiday throughout the Spanish empire in 1730. Spain commemorated the 400th anniversary in 1892 and urged other countries to join them. Italy, Latin American countries, and the United States did.
In the U.S. in 1792, Tammany Hall, the political organization for allegedly “pure Americans” in New York City, declared a local holiday recognizing Columbus. The first national Columbus Day was proclaimed for Oct. 12, 1892, by President Benjamin Harrison after 11 Italian immigrants were massacred in New Orleans — an attempt to mollify the Italian Americans.
However, for years afterwards many anti-immigrant groups were opposed to celebrating a Columbus Day because of its association with immigrants from Italy, a Catholic country, and with the Knights of Columbus, an American Catholic fraternal organization. For example, both the Ku Klux Klan and the Women of the Ku Klux Klan were opposed to Columbus Day celebrations and also to any monuments to Columbus.
After that first national Columbus Day, many Americans added a patriotic flavor to the day. Italian American communities gathered to celebrate their Italian cultural heritage more than Columbus himself. A first-generation American in Denver, Angelo Noce, lobbied for a legal holiday; the first statewide holiday was proclaimed in Colorado in 1905. In 1934, Congress passed a statute requesting the president to issue a proclamation designating October 12 each year as Columbus Day; President Franklin Delano Roosevelt did so.
Later, FDR removed the designation of Italian immigrants as “enemy aliens” on Columbus Day in 1942, and announced a plan to offer citizenship to 200,000 elderly Italians living in the U.S. who had been excluded because of a literacy requirement.
In 1966 the National Columbus Day Committee successfully lobbied to make Columbus Day a federal three-day weekend holiday. The bill was signed by President Lyndon Johnson on June 28,1968, to be effective as of 1971. Columbus Day was then celebrated on the second Monday in October.
The Quincentennial of Columbus Day in 1992 was preceded by years of historical research on the effect of the European invasion of the Americas, and the holiday became a focus for rethinking its significance. In 1990, representatives of American Indian groups met in Ecuador for a first Intercontinental Gathering of Indigenous People in the Americas, followed the next year in California by their declaration of Oct. 12, 1992, an “International Day of Solidarity with Indigenous People.” Studies in 2013 and 2015 found that 26% to 38% of American adults were not in favor of Columbus Day. The genocide of Native Americans and the exploitation and enslavement of them by Columbus were exposed and condemned.
Last year, President Joe Biden proclaimed Oct. 11, 2021, as Indigenous Peoples’ Day and issued a proclamation acknowledging it as a federal holiday. Currently, most states do not celebrate Columbus Day as a state holiday. Some states have replaced it with Indigenous Peoples’ Day and one community of Scandinavian descendants recognizes a Leif Erikson Day instead. Columbus, Ohio recognizes veterans instead of Columbus. In 2020, Akron, Ohio renamed Columbus Day to Italian-American Heritage and Culture Day.
Several tribal governments in Oklahoma designate October 12 as Native American Day or the day of their own tribe. Latin American communities in the U.S. celebrate Día de la Raza as a day of recognition and honor to the people, traditions, and cultures that were destroyed due to European colonization.
Many Latin American countries have rethought the importance of Columbus Day. Some wanted to stress their great Spanish heritage, while others lamented the suppression of the indigenous peoples and their cultures. Peru, for example, in 2009, changed it to Indigenous Peoples and Intercultural Dialogue Day. Today, October 12 is observed in some manner in many countries including Argentina, Venezuela, Columbia, Chile, Mexico, and Spain.
So what, if anything, can we conclude? The history of Columbus Day reveals various motives for celebrating October 12 by different people for different cultural and political reasons. In general, our knowledge today of the history since 1492 is broader and more accurate than at any time in the past and just what should be celebrated is still a matter for discussion — especially in the Americas.
Sources and More Information:
“Columbus Day 2022,” History.com editors, updated Aug. 23, 2022.
https://www.history.com/topics/exploration/columbus-day
“Columbus Day,” Editors of Encyclopedia Britannica, updated Oct. 6, 2022.
https://www.britannica.com/topic/Columbus-Day
Williams D. Phillips, Jr. and Carla Rahn Phillips, The Worlds of Christopher Columbus (1992), Cambridge University Press
“FDR's 1937 Columbus Day Proclamation,” Marc O. DeGirolami, Oct. 9, 2017, Law and Religion Forum.
https://lawandreligionforum.org/2017/10/09/fdrs-1937-columbus-day-proclamation/
“How did Columbus Day Become Indigenous Peoples Day?” HistoryNet staff, Oct. 11, 2021.
https://www.historynet.com/columbus-day-vs-indigenous-peoples-day/
“National Christopher Columbus Day Celebrations,” National Christopher Columbus Association.
https://christophercolumbus.org/about/columbus-day-celebrations/
Christopher Columbus, National Geographic.
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/search?q=christopher%20columbus&location=srp&type=manual
"Columbus Day Is Not A Holiday the U.S. — and Italian Americans — Should Celebrate," Celia Viggo Wexler, Oct. 11, 2021, NBC News Think.
"Celebrating Columbus Day Overlooks Violence Racism Against Indigenous People," Gregory Dowd, Oct. 7, 2021, University of Michigan, Dept. of Education.
https://news.umich.edu/celebrating-columbus-day-overlooks-violence-racism-against-indigenous-people/
"A Proclamation on Indigenous Peoples’ Day, 2021," Oct. 8, 2021, White House.
“Christopher Columbus’s Journal,” Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_Columbus%27s_journal
Jeanette E. Sherbondy is a retired anthropology professor from Washington College and has lived here since 1986. In retirement she has been active with the Kent County Historical Society and Sumner Hall, one of the organizers of Legacy Day, and helped get highway /historical markers recognizing Henry Highland Garnet. She published an article on her ethnohistorical research of the free Black village, Morgnec.
Title image: Pond at Pickering Creek Audubon Center, Talbot Co. Photo: Jan Plotczyk