On May 14, 1882, a proposal was made at the Central Labor Union meeting that all workers should join together for a monster labor festival in early September, according to a history of the holiday pieced together by researcher Linda Stinson for the United States Labor Department.
what they had labelled a monster labor festival on Tuesday, Sept. 5, according to Linda Stinson, a former historian for the Department of Labor (the idea for a general labor festival may have originated in Canada, which today also celebrates Labour Day on the first Monday in September). Initial
Sean Adams, Rosie Fakes, Josh Hagonow and Nicholas Puckett resigned their coaching jobs after the school corporation asked them to do so, said Linda Stinson, executive assistant to the superintendent.