Confederate Memorial Day is a
statutory holiday in
Alabama on the fourth Monday in April, in
Mississippi on the final Monday in April, and in
South Carolina on May 10. In
Georgia, the fourth Monday in April was formerly celebrated as Confederate Memorial Day, but beginning in 2016, in response to the
Charleston church shooting, the names of Confederate Memorial Day and
Robert E. Lee's Birthday were struck from the state calendar and the statutory holidays were designated simply as "state holidays". Beginning in 2020, state offices in Georgia now observe Confederate Memorial Day on
Good Friday, though it is still referred to as "State Holiday." Confederate Memorial Day
Florida also continues to officially designate Confederate Memorial Day on the fourth Monday in April, although state offices remain open.
North Carolina also designates the holiday on May 10, although state offices remain open and localities may choose whether to observe it. In June 2022, the
Louisiana State Legislature voted to remove Confederate Memorial Day, as well as
Robert E. Lee Day, from the state's calendar of official holidays.
Related holidays Tennessee In Tennessee, the governor is required by law to proclaim Confederate Decoration Day each June 3. In 1931, the
Texas Legislature made Robert E. Lee's birthday (January 19) a state holiday. In 1973, the Texas House had massive turnover, with 71 incoming freshman and 8 new Black representatives, which was the most in the House since the
Reconstruction era. One of the new Black legislators,
Senfronia Thompson, filed a bill to make January 15 a state holiday for Martin Luther King Jr., as an "honorary" state holiday that would not have any state offices or banks close in observance. The bill did not get a vote, but they did make other changes to the state holidays: the Texas Legislature removed Jefferson Davis' and Robert E. Lee's birthdays as state holidays, and replaced them with Confederate Heroes Day, to be celebrated on January 19. In 1987,
Martin Luther King Jr. Day was added as a federal holiday for the third Monday in January, and in that year the Texas Legislature made it an optional state holiday, and in 1991 they made MLK Day an official state holiday. In some years (1987, 1998, 2004, 2009, 2015, 2026) MLK Jr. Day and Confederate Heroes Day fall on the same day. Texas state Representatives and Senators have tried to amend or abolish Confederate Heroes Day from the state calendar: •
2015: State Representative
Donna Howard filed a bill to rename the holiday Civil War Remembrance Day; it did not get out of the committee for a vote •
2019: State Representative
Jarvis Johnson filed a bill to end the state holiday. It did not get out of committee. •
2021: State Representatives Jarvis Johnson and
Shawn Thierry filed bills to abolish the holiday, and state Senator
Nathan M. Johnson filed a bill to replace the holiday with one in June celebrating suffrage for all Americans; these did not get out of committee. •
2023: State Representative Jarvis Johnson again filed a bill to remove the holiday and state Senator Nathan Johnson sponsored legislation in the Senate; they did not get out of committee. ==Controversy==