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  • The Brief Origins of May Day

    Posted: 2025-05-01 12:28:13

    May Day's origins lie in the late 19th-century labor movement's fight for an eight-hour workday. Specifically, it commemorates the Haymarket Affair in Chicago, where workers protesting for shorter hours were met with police violence and a subsequent bombing, resulting in wrongful convictions and executions. The event galvanized international labor movements and, at the Second International's 1889 congress in Paris, May 1st was declared International Workers' Day in honor of the Haymarket martyrs and as a continuing call for the eight-hour workday. It became a day of demonstrations, strikes, and celebrations for workers' rights worldwide.

    Summary of Comments ( 159 )
    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43856798

    HN commenters discuss the history of May Day and its connection to the Haymarket affair. Some point out the common misconception that May Day commemorates the Haymarket bombing itself, rather than the broader movement for the eight-hour workday for which the executed anarchists were rallying. Others highlight the historical revisionism and propaganda surrounding the event, particularly the portrayal of the accused as violent agitators. A few users delve deeper into the specific legal aspects of the trial, emphasizing its unfairness and the lack of evidence linking the defendants to the bombing. The thread also briefly touches upon the international adoption of May Day as a workers' holiday and its subsequent evolution in different countries.