N.Y.
Executive Law Section 168-A
Designation of days of commemoration
1.
A day of commemoration is a calendar day so designated by this section or a calendar day in any one year so designated by a proclamation of the governor or resolution of the Senate and Assembly jointly adopted.2.
A day of commemoration shall not constitute a holiday or half-holiday but shall be a day set aside in recognition and special honor of a person, persons, group ideal or goal.3.
The following days shall be days of commemoration in each year: January sixth, to be known as “Haym Salomon Day”, January twenty-seventh, to be known as “Holocaust Remembrance Day”, February fourth, to be known as “Rosa Parks Day”, February fifteenth, to be known as “Susan B. Anthony Day”, February sixteenth, to be known as “Lithuanian Independence Day”, February twenty-eighth, to be known as “Gulf War Veterans’ Day”, March fourth, to be known as “Pulaski Day”, March eighth, to be known as “International Women’s Day”, March tenth, to be known as “Harriet Tubman Day”, March twenty-ninth, to be known as “Vietnam Veterans’ Day”, April ninth, to be known as “POW Recognition Day”, April twenty-seventh, to be known as “Coretta Scott King Day”, April twenty-eighth, to be known as “Workers’ Memorial Day”, the first Tuesday in May to be known as “New York State Teacher Day”, May seventeenth, to be known as “Thurgood Marshall Day”, the first Sunday in June, to be known as “Children’s Day”, June second, to be known as “Italian Independence Day”, June twelfth, to be known as “Women Veterans Recognition Day”, June nineteenth, to be known as “Juneteenth Freedom Day”, June twenty-fifth, to be known as “Korean War Veterans’ Day”, the second Monday in July, to be known as “Abolition Commemoration Day”, August twenty-fourth, to be known as “Ukrainian Independence Day”, August twenty-sixth, to be known as “Women’s Equality Day”, September eleventh, to be known as “Battle of Plattsburgh Day” and also to be known as “September 11th Remembrance Day”, September thirteenth, to be known as “John Barry Day” and also to be known as “Uncle Sam Day in the State of New York”, September seventeenth, to be known as “Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben Memorial Day”, the third Friday in September to be known as “New York State POW/MIA Recognition Day” except if such date of commemoration cannot be observed due to a religious holiday, such observances shall then be conducted on the second Friday of September, the last Saturday in September, to be known as “War of 1812 Day”, the fourth Saturday of September, known as “Native-American Day”, the last Sunday in September, to be known as “Gold Star Mothers’ Day”, October fifth, to be known as “Raoul Wallenberg Day”, October eleventh, to be known as “New Netherland Day in the State of New York”, October eighteenth, to be known as “Disabilities History Day”, October twenty-seventh, to be known as “Theodore Roosevelt Day”, November ninth, to be known as “Witness for Tolerance Day”, November twelfth, to be known as “Elizabeth Cady Stanton Day”, the third Tuesday in November to be known as “New York State School-Related Professionals Recognition Day”, November twenty-sixth, to be known as “Sojourner Truth Day”, November thirtieth, to be known as “Shirley Chisholm Day”, December third, to be known as “International Day of Persons with Disabilities”, December seventh, to be known as “Pearl Harbor Day”, December sixteenth, to be known as “Bastogne Day” and that day of the Asian lunar calendar designated as new year to be known as “Asian New Year”.
Source:
Section 168-A — Designation of days of commemoration, https://www.nysenate.gov/legislation/laws/EXC/168-A
(updated Nov. 29, 2024; accessed Dec. 21, 2024).