Photo: Guri Dahl / tinagent.com  .Photo: Guri Dahl / tinagent.com

Leif Erikson Day - Oct. 9, 2012

Last updated: 10/9/2012 // Roughly 500 years before Columbus sailed the ocean blue, Leif Erikson, it is widely believed, became the first European to set foot on North America. Every year since 1964, the U.S. president has declared October 9 "Leif Erikson Day" in honor of the feat.

Erikson (c. 970 – c. 1020), a famed Norse explorer,  founded a settlement in Vinland, now part of Canada.

Link to President Obama's 2012 proclamation: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2012/10/09/presidential-proclamation-leif-erikson-day-2012

In addition to the federal observance, some states officially commemorate Leif Erikson Day, particularly in the Upper Midwest, where large numbers of people from the Nordic countries settled. In 1930, Wisconsin became the first state to officially adopt this holiday, thanks to efforts by the Norwegian-American initiator, Rasmus B. Anderson. A year later Minnesota followed suit. In 1963, the U.S. Representative from Duluth, John Blatnik, introduced a bill to observe it nationwide. The following year Congress adopted this unanimously.

October 9 is not associated with any particular event in Leif Erikson's life. The date was chosen because the ship Restauration coming from Stavanger, Norway, arrived in New York Harbor on October 9, 1825 at the start of the first organized immigration from Norway to the United States.


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