Today is the May Day Bank Hol­i­day here in the UK, so I thought I would look at the his­tory of why we have these pub­lic hol­i­days.

I was sure that the com­monly held belief  of why ‘bank hol­i­days’ are so called was incor­rect, and it appears that Wikipedi­ans con­firm this assump­tion: “Bank hol­i­days are often assumed to be so called because they are days upon which banks are shut, but this is not in fact the case”. How­ever, I found the rea­son behind bank hol­i­day leg­is­la­tion fas­ci­nat­ing and very… British:

In 1871, the first leg­is­la­tion relat­ing to bank hol­i­days was passed when Sir John Lub­bock intro­duced the Bank Hol­i­days Act 1871 […]. Sir John was an enthu­si­as­tic sup­porter of cricket and was firmly of the belief that bank employ­ees should have the oppor­tu­nity to par­tic­i­pate in and attend matches when they were sched­uled. Included in the dates of bank hol­i­days are there­fore dates when cricket games were tra­di­tion­ally played between the vil­lages in the region where Sir John was raised. The Eng­lish peo­ple were so thank­ful that they called the first Bank Hol­i­days ‘St. Lubbock’s Days’.