Ode to the real holiday
- Share via
It’s done, dude. Summer, that is. Get over it. Get busy. Get back to
work.
Forget the Sept. 21 autumnal equinox thing, with the sun and the
earth and the poles and the diagrams. Way too complicated.
Tomorrow is Labor Day, the official end of summer, unofficially
speaking. In honor of this important holiday, I wanted to do a moving
ode to the indomitable spirit and endless energy of the American
worker, but that sounded like a lot of work.
Fortunately, I remembered doing a complete and slightly-accurate
history of the big L-Day some years ago, which we offer for your
edification and enjoyment, maybe, once again.
Labor Day was the brainchild of union organizers in this country
in the late 19th century. It all started with an Irish piano maker by
the name of Peter McGuire in the city we now know as New York, which
at the time was called “New York.”
Working conditions in those days were atrocious and Peter M., for
one, decided that enough is enough, which is enough. It was the same
grind, day after day -- find an elephant, drag him downtown, get the
tusks, carve the keys. It was very hard work, for very long hours and
very little pay.
On Sept. 5, 1882, Pete and his fellow laborers, who were also
grumpy, organized the first “Labor Day” parade. Thousands of workers
and Pete marched up Broadway carrying signs that read “Labor Creates
All Wealth” and “8 Hours Work, 8 Hours Rest, 8 Hours Recreation,” and
singing “This Land is Your Land” and “If I Had a Hammer.” The part
about the songs isn’t true. I made that up.
In 1894, President Cleveland declared Labor Day a national
holiday. By the way, since we’re talking about baseball, what do Babe
Ruth, Grover Cleveland, and “Baby Ruth” candy bars have in common?
They are all part of one of the great confusions of the 20th century.
The candy bar was named after Cleveland’s granddaughter, Ruth, who
became America’s darling at the turn of the century and was known as
“Baby Ruth.” By the 1920’s, when Baby Ruth wasn’t a baby anymore, she
was almost forgotten and the candy bars had virtually disappeared.
But the 1920’s were also Babe Ruth’s golden years and, somehow, an
urban myth began that the candy bars were named after the Sultan of
Swat, which Ruth, always the promoter, did nothing to discourage.
What does any of this have to do with Labor Day? Nothing that I
know of.
In 1898, the head of the American Federation of Labor, Samuel
Gompers (is that one of the greatest names ever or what?), waxed
poetic about Labor Day. The Gomp called it the day on which “... the
workers of our day may not only lay down their tools of labor for a
holiday, but upon which they may touch shoulders in marching phalanx
and feel the stronger for it.” Personally, when I lay down my tools
of labor, the last thing I want to do is march in a phalanx and touch
shoulders with people I don’t know. But then, those were different
times, and over a century later, those lofty beginnings are all but
forgotten.
With all due respect to Pete and Samuel, Labor Day in the here and
now boils down to this: beach, barbecues, sales.
Once again, I will work assiduously to avoid the wandering mass of
humanity in search of long weekend fun. There is no beach inviting
enough, no barbecue smoky enough, no sale price low enough to lure me
from my lair.
As always, the high point of my long holiday weekend will be
Monday night, sitting by the television, watching one traffic
reporter after another describe the endless lines of cars snaking
their way down the Santa Ana Freeway and the Riverside Freeway. I
particularly enjoy watching the freeway misadventures of the poor
souls who made the worst travel choice imaginable -- Las Vegas on a
three-day weekend.
So try as we might, we find small meaning in Labor Day aside from
summer’s end. But that, in and of itself, is not without significance
in our corner of the universe.
After all, this is a beach community, is it not? It isn’t just the
twice-daily crush on Newport Boulevard that is now transformed. Over
the next few weeks, as the joy of learning resumes for the little
ones, and the big ones, the traffic game returns to winter rules:
Long lines of mother-mobiles dropping of and picking up at school,
high school and college parking lots bursting with cars -- luxury
cars at the high schools, ’88 Toyota Tercels at the colleges. You’ll
be able to drive on Coast Highway again and actually find a parking
space almost anywhere you want. The flying banners for “Captain
Cool’s Wine Coolers -- the Cooler Cooler” and “KDRK-FM -- All Dreck,
All the Time” will be gone, as will the clutches of people with the
disposable cameras, the Bermuda shorts and the black socks.
In six weeks, it’ll be time to wrestle with the clocks and VCRs
yet again, then that first shock of walking out of work in the dark.
So it goes -- the circle of life in the Newport-Mesa.
I think it was the philosopher Mungo Jerry who said it best: “In
the summertime, when the weather is high, you can stretch right up
and touch the sky.” Actually, forget that. It didn’t make any sense
in 1969, and it doesn’t make any sense now.
You have exactly one more day, so make the best of it. Just don’t
ask me to do anything. I gotta go.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.