Casimir pulaski
Casimir Pulaski Day is a holiday observed in Illinois on the first Monday of every March to commemorate Casimir Pulaski, a Revolutionary War cavalry officer born March 4, 1747 in Poland as Kazimierz Pułaski. He was a Polish soldier. He is known for his contributions to the US military at the time by training its soldiers and cavalry. The day is celebrated mainly in areas that have large Polish populations. This is a separate holiday from the federal holiday, General Pulaski Memorial Day, which commemorates Pulaski’s death at the Siege of Savannah on October 11, 1779.
Illinois enacted a law on June 20, 1977 to celebrate the birthday of Casimir Pulaski and held the first official Pulaski Day celebrations in 1978. The bill was introduced by Senator Leroy W. Lemke (D)- Chicago. Chicago celebrates Pulaski Day on the first Monday in March with an annual parade. Cook County government (which includes Chicago) and the Chicago Public Library also close on this holiday. The holiday is also observed in Wisconsin public schools, celebrated March 4th, as outlined in state statute 118.02 (although this is not universally observed). Indiana also marks the day as a commemorative day by governor’s proclamation (IC 1-1-12.5), although it is not a state holiday.
Observed by Chicago - Illinois
Type City Holiday, State Holiday
Date First Monday of March
2008 date March 3
Related to General Pulaski Memorial Day
In popular culture
Michigan-born songwriter Sufjan Stevens titled a song “Casimir Pulaski Day” on his album Illinois. The song is not specifically about the celebration but about a personal event that took place on Casimir Pulaski Day as indicated by the lyric, “…in the morning, in the winter shade, on the first of March, on the holiday.”
The Rock and Metal band Clutch featured a song titled “Pulaski Skyway” on their 2005 album Robot Hive/Exodus.
Chicago-based rock band Big Black had a 1987 song titled “Kasimir S. Pulaski Day”.