When I hear the words “May Day”, I think of May poles, flowers and little girls in white dresses with crowns of flowers on their heads. Someone else I know says it reminds her of the smell of library paste and a May pole on the school grounds (why didn’t we have one of those at our school?) From a cursory search, I found out that this is common in England.
Wikipedia says that May Day on May 1 is an ancient northern hemisphere spring festival and usually a public holiday; it is also a traditional spring holiday in many cultures. Dances, singing, and cake are usually part of the celebrations that the day includes.
The name of the pagan festival in Great Britain that is celebrated on the same day is Beltane/Beltaine, or Bonfire Day. It is approximately half way between the Spring equinox and the Summer solstice, and is an important Gaelic festival. There is a modern version of this, called the Beltane fire festival, which is celebrated in Edinburgh, Scotland each year.
There are other, similar, festivals that have occurred throughout the world since ancient times.
In the 1900’s, Communists began to celebrate Worker’s Day on May 1. The date was chosen by an organization of socialist and communist political parties to commemorate the Haymarket affair, which occurred in Chicago on May 4 1886. In 1904 a call went out to “all Social Democratic Party organisations and trade unions of all countries to demonstrate energetically on the First of May for the legal establishment of the 8-hour day, for the class demands of the proletariat, and for universal peace.”
There you have it. My five-minute history of May Day. Personally, I still prefer the little girls with flowers in their hair.
By the way, have you ever heard of Morris dancing? That is something that is done in England on May Day too. Apparently, there are all kinds, but Morris dancing is known to have been done at least as early as Elizabethan times in England.
However you decide to celebrate May day, take care, don’t over do, and – whatever you do – don’t accidentally set yourself on fire!




May is a month of particular devotions to Mary for Catholics. Most parishes have may crownings where the children have a procession and carry flowers to Our Lady, culminating with a crowning with a woven crown of flowers.
In our parish there are so many children they fill the front of the church and our children’s schola sings, the priest gives the children some information and encouragement, and the the crowning comes, and they process back outside to the little garden area with an outdoor Mary statue to leave flowers there as well.
We used to always do the crowning the first Sunday in May, but now Father schedules it close to Mother’s Day.
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In a tiny town in Missouri in the 1950’s we always had a May Pole and, as I recall, boys and girls holding long, wide, ribbons (made of crepe paper) ran around the thing in opposite directions lacing the ribbons around the pole. Not one of us, nor the teachers, nor anyone who came to watch had any idea why we did all that, but we kids loved it. Since it was Missouri, I just assumed somehow it had to do with cows. Thanks for clearing that up. 🙂
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We had a May Day festival when I was in elementary school in New Mexico Fond memories of that day. We learned a special dance for it, but it wasn’t like the one in the video.
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They also have a “Hobby Horse” in the mix of fun. It’s really weird!
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