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VA Senate passes bill removing Lee-Jackson Day as holiday. Here's the origin of the celebration

If the legislation is passed by the House and Gov. Northam, the controversial holiday will be replaced with Election Day.

RICHMOND, Va. — The origins of the holiday date back over 100 years. The Virginia General Assembly designated Confederate General Robert E. Lee's birthday as a holiday back in 1890, according to the Richmond-Times Dispatch

In 1904, the Assembly made the holiday Lee-Jackson Day, to honor another Confederate general, Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson. 

Then 80 years later President Ronald Reagan signed a bill establishing a national holiday to celebrate civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. The following year the Virginia Legislature combined King's celebration with the state's holiday honoring the two Confederate generals, forming the incongruous "Lee-Jackson-King Day."

In 2000, those two celebrations were separated.

RELATED: Virginia lawmaker proposes bill to end Lee-Jackson holiday

Since then, Martin Luther King Jr. Day falls on the third Monday in January, while Lee-Jackson Day falls on the preceding Friday.

Celebrating Confederate generals continues to be a controversial topic. Locally, Norfolk, Newport News, and Hampton choose not to observe the holiday. 

Gov. Ralph Northam has even proposed eliminating it entirely and make Election Day a state holiday. Norfolk Delegate Joseph Lindsey has introduced a bill in the current session (HB 108) to do just that.

RELATED: Governor Northam announces budget, legislative priorities for historic justice, equity agenda

RELATED: Two Confederate monuments in Richmond have been vandalized

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