Although the United States is young compared to other
countries, its culture and traditions are rich because of the
contributions made by the many groups of people who have come to
its shores over the past two centuries. Hundreds of regional
holidays have originated from the geography, climate and history
of the different parts of the country. Each state holds its own
annual fair with local themes and music; and some celebrate the
day on which they joined the Union and became a state.
Throughout the northeastern states, the main attractions are
festivals that welcome in the autumn as the leaves on the trees
begin to turn red, orange and yellow. Warner, New Hampshire holds
a Fall Foliage Festival which offers a wood-chopping contest and
an auction. Towns in Vermont welcome tourists who drive along the
scenic mountain roads to view the fiery colors of the leaves.
When the weather becomes chillier, and snow begins to fall,
skiing tournaments attract professional and amateur skiers in
hilly towns such as Stratton, Vermont.
The leaves turn colors a little later in October in Bedford,
Pennsylvania where the townspeople celebrate the fall foliage by
demonstrating ways of cooking that have been handed down to them
by their ancestors. In the nearby Pennsylvania Dutch region,
people are proud of their European ancestry, and celebrate it
through seasonal festivals. In Kutztown and other rural
Pennsylvania towns, spring festivals are common, with costumed
pageants and parades.
Farther south, battles are re-enacted in historical
celebrations such as the Revolutionary War Days in Waldorf,
Maryland. Confederate Civil War general Robert E. Lee's birthday
is commemorated in January in various southern states, while
other southern states observe Confederate Memorial Day in April
or June. People in many southern states welcome spring with
dancing.Celebrants of the Dixie Holiday in Shreveport, Louisiana
carry on the early American tradition of square dancing; and in
the National Square Dance Festival in Slade, Kentucky, dancers,
singers and musicians enter competition in hopes of winning
awards. In Biloxi, Mississippi, celebrants even dance in the
streets during the festival marking the blessing of the shrimp
fleet in June. A mass is held as well, in thanks for the fish
harvested from the Gulf of Mexico.
Folk fairs in the American Midwest offer foods of ethnic
diversity, because people of so many different nationalities have
settled there. In May, the townspeople of Orange City, Iowa and
Holland, Michigan celebrate their Dutch ancestry through a yearly
Tulip Festival.
African Americans have begun to observe Kwanzaa, a holiday
based on the African celebration of the first harvest of the
year, December 26 through January 1. Developed in 1966, by a
black studies professor at California State University, Maulana
Karenga, Kwanzaa celebrates the unity and development of the
African community. Founded upon the "Nguzo Saba," or
the seven principles of unity, self- determination, collective
work and responsibility, cooperative economics, purpose,
creativity and faith, Kwanzaa encourages African Americans to
think about their African roots in addition to their present- day
life in America. African Americans will exchange gifts as rewards
for their achievements; and they will light the "Mishumaa
Saba" or seven candles to remind them of the seven
principles which unite them.
Winters are long in many midwestern states, so winter
festivals have become social events. In St. Paul, Minnesota, the
Winter Carnival offers exhibitions in skating, skiing, ice
fishing and even snowmobile races. In Houghton Lake, Michigan, a
winter festival called Tip-Up-Town USA offers a contest for the
best sculpture carved in ice!
Farther west, in the summer, religious ceremonies mark the
Mormon Miracle Pageant in Manti, Utah. In St. Maries, Idaho
during Paul Bunyan Days in August, townspeople commemorate this
legendary American lumberjack by holding tree-cutting contests.
Aspen, Colorado holds the annual summer Music Festival where
musicians of classical and contemporary music can perform or hold
classes. The coastal town of Santa Barbara, California pays
tribute to the early settlers who came from Spain, by performing
historical plays during the Old Spanish Days in August. The
northwestern state of Oregon boasts a rose festival in Portland,
where bands play music in a parade of flowers and floats. In
nearby Washington, spring is welcomed in with a Daffodil Festival
offering a parade of floats made from these brilliant yellow
flowers.
Spring in the southwest finds the townspeople of Okeene,
Oklahoma catching snakes in the Rattlesnake Roundup. In Houston,
Texans come to the Astrodome to see cowboys ride horses and rope
cattle during the Livestock Show and Rodeo. Visitors watch the
Hopi Indians carry on their strong tradition of rain dancing, a
combination of dancing and prayer to invoke rain in a hot, dry
August. Many other holidays of the southwest offer a western
theme. Tombstone, Arizona celebrates Helidorado Days in the
autumn, while in Tucson, cowboys and Indians show their skills in
La Festival de los Vaqueros, or the Cowboy Festival. Lincoln, New
Mexico holds Pony Express races in honor of the first U.S. mail
system and a fiddlers' convention as part of Lincoln County Days.
Alaska and Hawaii, the two youngest states, have climates and
histories different from each other and the rest of the country.
Nome, Alaska has daylight almost twenty-four hours a day in June,
so raft races and midnight baseball games are the main events in
the Midnight Sun Festival. In Kodiak, a King Crab Festival during
crabharvesting season in May, and the Iceworm Festival in Cordova
offers airboat races.
Hawaii is warm the year round, and flower festivals were held
there even before it became a state. The Narcissus Festival in
April has Chinese origins. "Lei Day is May Day" say the
celebrants on May first. However, the lei, a large colorful
garland of orchids worn around the neck, is a sign of friendship
and welcome for visitors to the islands all year. The biggest
celebration of the year is the legal holiday Kamehameha Day on
June 11. The festivities begin outside lolanl, the only palace in
America, when members of Hawaiian societies and organisations
sing and chant ancient praises for King Kamehameha the First, who
established a unified kingdom of islands by 1810. Honolulu begins
to fill with enormous floats, on which costumed people stand
among scenes from the history of Hawaii. Someone is chosen every
year to sit on the main float and represent King Kamehameha the
First, who was the first of five monarchs to rule Hawaii over a
hundred years.
These are only a small representation of the hundreds of
holidays and celebrations observed throughout the United States.
Each state has its own individual history and people, and the
right to celebrate its own tradition. But one thing is certain -
all Americans welcome you to celebrate with them!